A curt announcement from Fox News tonight terminates the employment of human-toad hybrid Dick Morris.
Fired for always being wrong? Conservative former Clinton adviser Dick Morris will no longer serve as a contributor to Fox News, the network confirmed Tuesday. “His contract is up and we will not be renewing it,” a spokesman said.
Hey Dickie…welcome to Loser Town….Population..You!
What a shameless whore Morris has been, every time he flacks on a radio show or TV show, he has to sell the new, poorly sourced, hastily written book he slapped together.
Expect him to linger on crappy local conservative talk radio shows in Tulsa or Des Moines or Boise…..
Now that’s two grifters cut loose from Fox. Palin and now Dick. Maybe they could start a consulting firm. Charge by the word and recommend that the customer do the exact opposite of the advice given.
Dick Morris..was he the one with the foot fetish or was he the cross-dresser?
Foot fetish…
Dick Morris’ paid mistress said he had a fetish for toe sucking (info that goes into the TMI hall of fame) — and that he believed paying for her loving negated the fact he was cheating on his wife.
Now that’s two grifters cut loose from Fox. Palin and now Dick. Maybe they could start a consulting firm. Charge by the word and recommend that the customer do the exact opposite of the advice given.
Now that’s two grifters cut loose from Fox. Palin and now Dick. Maybe they could start a consulting firm. Charge by the word and recommend that the customer do the exact opposite of the advice given.
Yeah, but that’s an invasive species. I’m talking about your basic hop toad, a fine American Species. Inferring that they can actually interbreed with the likes of a Dick Morris just gives me the rigors!
Now that there’s an opening at Fox News for someone who always gets things wrong, maybe they’ll hire Michael Brown, the head of FEMA during Hurricane Katrina.
Now that there’s an opening at Fox News for someone who always gets things wrong, maybe they’ll hire Michael Brown, the head of FEMA during Hurricane Katrina.
Now that there’s an opening at Fox News for someone who always gets things wrong, maybe they’ll hire Michael Brown, the head of FEMA during Hurricane Katrina.
He did a heckuva job! A brilliant on-site supervisor and emergency response manager.
What is curious is the whole business model of Fox is to mislead their viewers. Over and over. Funny how doing the job is now reason for firing.
I think doing it poorly and making a mockery of himself and the network was the problem. If the enough wingnuts tip to the fact they they’ve been completely duped, it could reach a critical mass, and Fox and hate radio would all be out of business.
I think doing it poorly and making a mockery of himself and the network was the problem. If the enough wingnuts tip to the fact they they’ve been completely duped, it could reach a critical mass, and Fox and hate radio would all be out of business.
FNC could find a new business model, and may in fact be moving in that direction. It is, after all, possible to be right of center without being nutty or dishonest.
They could save themselves years of time and trouble that way. This way Fox can scrape the bottom of the barrel without having to hire a succession of cretins, all of whom are slightly dumber than the one before.
They could save themselves years of time and trouble that way. This way Fox can scrape the bottom of the barrel without having to hire a succession of cretins, all of whom are slightly dumber than the one before.
Maximus derpus, if you will.
Fox and Rove probaly got the word from their moneybags: ‘This TP shit ain’t working, time to try a giuoco piano.’
FNC could find a new business model, and may in fact be moving in that direction. It is, after all, possible to be right of center without being nutty or dishonest.
If they did, they’d have to admit that everything they’ve been feeding the wingnuts was a lie. That’s bad for credibility. It’s possible that they could leverage the short attention spans of the American people, but the Internet remembers. I don’t see reasonable people ever taking Fox more seriously than Pravda.
The fact that Rove is still on FOX tells me that the big money GOPers are still fool enough to pour more of their many millions into his next, grift……. er con, er……I mean effort to create a permanent Republican majority. I say this because nothing Palin or Morris said was as much of an embarrassment as Rove’s meltdown over OH being called on election night.
As mushers prepare for the Iditarod, Alaska’s world-famous,1,000-plus-mile dogsled race, they are finding that one key ingredient is missing: snow.
In Fairbanks, Alaska, where many mushers train, the snowpack is 21 percent of average, and a number of Iditarod qualifying races have been postponed, rerouted or canceled due to a lack of snow, according to The New York Times.
“It’s raining and not snowing,” musher Luan Marques told the Times during a training run that involved avoiding puddles on the trail. “That’s not good.”
The Don Bowers Memorial 200/300, the Sheep Mountain Lodge 150 and the Knik 200 were canceled. Twenty-five miles of trail were cut off the Copper Basin 300 in Glennallen, Alaska, because of no snow at the finish line.
“That was crazy with the warm weather,” race organizer Zach Steer told the Times. “It was such a drastic change from last year, but the trail at the end was dirt. It wasn’t safe.”
The fact that Rove is still on FOX tells me that the big money GOPers are still fool enough to pour more of their many millions into his next, grift……. er con, er……I mean effort to create a permanent Republican majority. I say this because nothing Palin or Morris said was as much of an embarrassment as Rove’s meltdown over OH being called on election night.
Sheldon Adelson poured as much as 150M down the sewer. In the end, though, he was making it faster than the TPOP could waste it.
The fact that Rove is still on FOX tells me that the big money GOPers are still fool enough to pour more of their many millions into his next, grift……. er con, er……I mean effort to create a permanent Republican majority. I say this because nothing Palin or Morris said was as much of an embarrassment as Rove’s meltdown over OH being called on election night.
Yes, but thanks to Megyn Kelly the embarrassment was almost entirely on Karl Rove, not on Fox News. The Decision Desk called Ohio correctly and in accord with its established procedures, and then Kelly slapped Rove down when he railed against the call.
Now, now, at this point, it’s *weather*. Don’t go all taxfreekiller on us. If they have to move the Iditarod to the North Slope in five years, however…
But your point is very well taken. Strange days indeed.
We’ve been in the upper 70’s most of the last week.
Now, now, at this point, it’s *weather*. Don’t go all taxfreekiller on us. If they have to move the Iditarod to the North Slope in five years, however…
But your point is very well taken. Strange days indeed.
We’ve been in the upper 70’s most of the last week.
Since her husband sometimes races in the Iditarod, do you think this might finally pound a clue into Sarah Palin’s brain?
Since her husband sometimes races in the Iditarod, do you think this might finally pound a clue into Sarah Palin’s brain?
/half sarc
Gah, I know this info….help me.
Todd sometimes rode in the Iron Dog, the one on machines. It was actually funny, the last time he rode, his snowmobile had sponsored/ had the logos of the Venezuelan Oil company and all that. Viva Hugo!!
To celebrate, here is one of Feynman’s most beloved classics, a 1964 lecture in which he distills with equal parts wit and wisdom the essence of the scientific method:
“In general, we look for a new law by the following process: First we guess it; then we compute the consequences of the guess to see what would be implied if this law that we guessed is right; then we compare the result of the computation to nature, with experiment or experience, compare it directly with observation, to see if it works. If it disagrees with experiment, it is wrong. In that simple statement is the key to science. It does not make any difference how beautiful your guess is, it does not make any difference how smart you are, who made the guess, or what his name is — if it disagrees with experiment, it is wrong.”
How can anyone get fired on Fox news for always being wrong?
Since when did truth or accuracy count there?
Dick Morris was a Clintonista. The Fox hounds are looking forward to 2016 and wondering if his old loyalties may come back. They can’t have a chicken in the Fox house.
I want a good, hard, 22 degree freeze here to kill off the bugs. Like fleas. The last time we had a winter like this, the little fucking blood suckers came boiling out of the ground. Skeeters, too.
Dick Morris was a Clintonista. The Fox hounds are looking forward to 2016 and wondering if his old loyalties may come back. They can’t have a chicken in the Fox house.
I don’t think Hillary Clinton likes him very much, not since he called her a lesbian.
I want a good, hard, 22 degree freeze here to kill off the bugs. Like fleas. The last time we had a winter like this, the little fucking blood suckers came boiling out of the ground. Skeeters, too.
The summer sucks.. You come home from work and the insects are lined up like at studio 54 with the velvet ropes and bouncers to get in… And those dang air wings of flying critters can’t be stopped flying in. I’m beginning to understand why you need a shotgun in Oklahoma for home security.
/
Obsidian—sharp-edged, translucent, and lustrous—is one of the most distinctive volcanic rocks. Its unique glassy properties result from a disordered structure: the atoms are irregular, like a liquid. Whereas crystalline materials like ice, diamonds, or granite have atoms arranged in repeating patterns, obsidian and other types of glass retain an irregular pattern because the atoms are frozen in place as the material solidifies. This can happen if a liquid is cooled very quickly (quenched in water, for example), or if it is so thick that the atoms have trouble moving through the fluid. Therefore extremely viscous, slow-moving lavas sometimes harden into obsidian.
The churn of ignorance about all things too esoteric continues unabated… and as an example I bring up what I briefly mentioned last night about the newly published paper re-dating some of the Neanderthal artifacts from Spain. What was determined to a better accuracy is the age of the remains, dating them from before (at least, from what evidence exists) the arrival of modern humans into the Iberian penninsula.
Well, AP went an ran a story that leapt on this and proclaimed that therefore modern humans could not have mated with Neanderthals.
Well, the illogic of the AP story is pretty clear - the PNAS published paper reports on just one geographic region. Modern humans and Neanderthals had overlapping geographic domains much earlier, but not in what we today call Spain. And of course the AP story ignored the genetic evidence.
Anyway, the point of me writing about this is how these poorly written or just wrong news wire stories can live on. Sure enough RawStory runs with it:
By comparison, humans are not believed to have come into existence until 42,000 years ago, placing a substantial gap between the species.
[…]
That is just false, and what RawStory is doing is just republishing a blog entry from somewhere, from somebody who relied upon the AP story.
We humans are especially prone to spreading falsehoods - perhaps some ancient adaptation for survival? - and all too often just regurgitating what someone else has written is simply spreading misinformation.
Which is why I encourage people to not just cut and paste a story which catches their eye, to make a Page. Doing some work and understanding the provenance of the “information” is important.
The summer sucks.. You come home from work and the insects are lined up like at studio 54 with the velvet ropes and bouncers to get in… And those dang air wings of flying critters can’t be stopped flying in. I’m beginning to understand why you need a shotgun in Oklahoma for home security.
/
Are you still you going to be in SubNorman this summer? If so, you have *got* to get one of these:
The churn of ignorance about all things too esoteric continues unabated… and as an example I bring up what I briefly mentioned last night about the newly published paper re-dating some of the Neanderthal artifacts from Spain. What was determined to a better accuracy is the age of the remains, dating them from before (at least, from what evidence exists) the arrival of modern humans into the Iberian penninsula.
Well, AP went an ran a story that leapt on this and proclaimed that therefore modern humans could not have mated with Neanderthals.
Well, the illogic of the AP story is pretty clear - the PNAS published paper reports on just one geographic region. Modern humans and Neanderthals had overlapping geographic domains much earlier, but not in what we today call Spain. And of course the AP story ignored the genetic evidence.
Anyway, the point of me writing about this is how these poorly written or just wrong news wire stories can live on. Sure enough RawStory runs with it:
That is just false, and what RawStory is doing is just republishing a blog entry from somewhere, from somebody who relied upon the AP story.
We humans are especially prone to spreading falsehoods - perhaps some ancient adaptation for survival? - and all too often just regurgitating what someone else has written is simply spreading misinformation.
Which is why I encourage people to not just cut and paste a story which catches their eye, to make a Page. Doing some work and understanding the provenance of the “information” is important.
Neither the AP nor Raw Story cares about the science. In a very real sense, what they both want out of that story is the same thing Fox News would want out of it: To make as big of a splash with it as possible in order to get people to come to the site and read it, thus gaining advertiser dollars.
He [Razib Khan] rips into them and weighs in on on their criticisms of Jared Diamond (whose The World until Yesterday I reviewed in a recent NR) […]
In case anyone has not heard the news, a few days ago some special interest groups who work with indigenous groups around the world (who have not integrated into modern society) took Jared Diamond to task for Diamond’s insistence that many groups’ cultures included self-limiting practices that we, in our modern society, would consider barbaric.
Anyway, that NRO likes Razib Khan ought not be a surprise, given Khans association in the past with very dodgy characters.
Along with Deep Woods Off, Skin So Soft, and a 10-horsepower electric fan, those things are just killer bee!
Hi There! I’m getting there after taxes and other details get worked out. I’ve been dumping money into the place for about 6 months now..I can’t believe it some days.
The churn of ignorance about all things too esoteric continues unabated… and as an example I bring up what I briefly mentioned last night about the newly published paper re-dating some of the Neanderthal artifacts from Spain. What was determined to a better accuracy is the age of the remains, dating them from before (at least, from what evidence exists) the arrival of modern humans into the Iberian penninsula.
Well, AP went an ran a story that leapt on this and proclaimed that therefore modern humans could not have mated with Neanderthals.
Well, the illogic of the AP story is pretty clear - the PNAS published paper reports on just one geographic region. Modern humans and Neanderthals had overlapping geographic domains much earlier, but not in what we today call Spain. And of course the AP story ignored the genetic evidence.
Anyway, the point of me writing about this is how these poorly written or just wrong news wire stories can live on. Sure enough RawStory runs with it:
That is just false, and what RawStory is doing is just republishing a blog entry from somewhere, from somebody who relied upon the AP story.
We humans are especially prone to spreading falsehoods - perhaps some ancient adaptation for survival? - and all too often just regurgitating what someone else has written is simply spreading misinformation.
Which is why I encourage people to not just cut and paste a story which catches their eye, to make a Page. Doing some work and understanding the provenance of the “information” is important.
Hi There! I’m getting there after taxes and other details get worked out. I’ve been dumping money into the place for about 6 months now..I can’t believe it some days.
In case anyone has not heard the news, a few days ago some special interest groups who work with indigenous groups around the world (who have not integrated into modern society) took Jared Diamond to task for Diamond’s insistence that many groups’ cultures included self-limiting practices that we, in our modern society, would consider barbaric.
Anyway, that NRO likes Razib Khan ought not be a surprise, given Khans association in the past with very dodgy characters.
NRO’s dislike of Diamond is more based on Victor Davis Hanson’s open disagreement with the thesis Diamond presents in Gun, Germs, and Steel.
No..After months of searching around with the list of places I want to go forever.. Cali, NY, Florida, over seas, etc..Every week I posted about Pro’s and Con’s. I never want to work again so taxes and expenses played a big park. I found a place in the middle of nowhere, Paradise, They don’t even deliver mail there. Slow DSL and hopefully a slow peaceful life.
No..After months of searching around with the list of places I want to go forever.. Cali, NY, Florida, over seas, etc..Every week I posted about Pro’s and Con’s. I never want to work again so taxes and expenses played a big park. I found a place in the middle of nowhere, Paradise, They don’t even deliver mail there. Slow DSL and hopefully a slow life and peace..
Paradise as in Paradise Michigan in the Upper Peninsula?
Paradise as in Paradise Michigan in the Upper Peninsula?
I lived in Marquette for three years. Early Winter, Winter, Late Winter, and the Fourth of July Weekend is not my ideal as Paradise. And that 144” of snow per winter was one mean bitch kitty.
NRO’s dislike of Diamond is more based on Victor Davis Hanson’s open disagreement with the thesis Diamond presents in Gun, Germs, and Steel.
In this case the writer isn’t really commenting on Diamond, but simply using the brouhaha over Diamond’s latest statements as a leaping off point to agree with Razib Khan’s dismissal of contemporary cultural anthropologists.
In this case the writer isn’t really commenting on Diamond, but simply using the brouhaha over Diamond’s latest statements as a leaping off point to agree with Razib Khan’s dismissal of contemporary cultural anthropologists.
Diamond was the person I knew about, so that the direction I went in. Please excuse the error.
Going back a few posts, I’m considering that Kindle Fire… I have not owned a tablet to this point, just a Droid phone, laptop, etc. Would that be a good one to start out with? I mainly need it to display PDFs at the gaming table, and watch videos in various formats. It appears to support MP4, but there’s no mention of AVI or MKV… I’m used to running Media Player Classic in Windows, which is fairly omnivorous.
My impression today is that the research is coming in too quickly for the printing of books which don’t become OBE within a couple of years.
There are a couple of books on hominins, now a couple of years old, but which are insightful.
One of them is called “The Last Human” by Sawyer and Deak, which reviews about 22 different species. Now out of date, but it still can help understand why anthropologists lump certain finds into this or that “species”. There was another book whose title I can’t remember right now, but included hundreds of photos of fossils, explaining why they are assigned to this or that species.
One can’t discuss Neanderthals without discussing the rest of the family, as it is not clear how clear the species’ boundaries were.
The online expert, for the generally educated reader, would be John Hawk’s blog - given his experience in teaching on the subject his blog has pedagogically useful entries.
I also reviewed here a while back one of Chris Stringer’s latest books, which covered the topic of Neanderthals among others. He’s mentioned in the latest AP story that is misleading people.
Stringer has a long history at being at the center of the controversy over how we relate to Neanderthals, and if we moderns evolved in Africa first then moved out, or if we evolved in some sort of multi-regional fashion.
Check out their links for general backgrounders (the Smithsonian is an excellent source). That will give you enough info to start asking the questions you *really* want answered. If you’ve got a decent University in town with a lending library, go there and find a science geek librarian.
The info is there. You just have to drill down to what you want to know. Librarians are beautiful people. It’s their job, after all, to help you find what you need.
It’s one of the reasons I sometimes hate the interwebs. The amount of data is intimidating, especially for you youngsters who look at me like I’m an alien when I say “Dewey Decimal Card System.”
Barbara Cargill, whom Rick Perry picked to chair the State Board of Education, is upset that a curriculum used by several Texas schools called CSCOPE, which has been at the center of right-wing conspiracy theories, doesn’t teach students about alternative theories to evolution. As first reported by the Texas Freedom Network, Cargill said that publishers and CSCOPE should teach “another side to the theory of evolution.”
It’s a fascinating read, although they get a number of things incorrect. I am not terribly surprised, since glass is a misunderstood material. If it’s flowing, it’s not glass. Glass doesn’t have a melting temperature, it has a glass transition temperature. :)
The interior of the flow is still a melt (i.e., super-cooled liquid below the crystallization point, although I can’t say for sure if the interior is totally super-cooled in this case since rock/glass can be a fantastic thermal insulator). The outside, however, is a glass - hence the breaking noises.
It’s a fascinating read, although they get a number of things incorrect. I am not terribly surprised, since glass is a misunderstood material. If it’s flowing, it’s not glass. Glass doesn’t have a melting temperature, it has a glass transition temperature. :)
My high school chemistry teacher taught me otherwise, but then again, he hated me and made me sit behind the air hood so he wouldn’t even have to look at me…
Thank you for bringing back that repressed trauma…
My high school chemistry teacher taught me otherwise, but then again, he hated me and made me sit behind the air hood so he wouldn’t even have to look at me…
Thank you for bringing back that repressed trauma…
I hear a lot of the misconceptions about glass. I even used to believe some of them.
Apologies for the (now not) repressed trauma, though.
I hear a lot of the misconceptions about glass. I even used to believe some of them.
Apologies for the (now not) repressed trauma, though.
I was a nerd who skipped the second grade. And I was the only sophmore (freshman age) in a chemistry class full of juniors and seniors. I am sure that in a setting with others of my own age group, I would have been only moderately obnoxious, but as it was, I stuck out like a sore thumb.
I was a nerd who skipped the second grade. And I was the only sophmore (freshman age) in a chemistry class full of juniors and seniors. I am sure that in a setting with others of my own age group, I would have been only moderately obnoxious, but as it was, I stuck out like a sore thumb.
I was a little too enthusiastic about chemistry for my chemistry teacher, I think. I sort of got the feeling she was glad to see the last of me.
second, this one is rather cute. Although the adult version looks like some arctic transportation beast one might see enshrined in artwork on some fantasy or sci-fi paperback cover.
Dicks like that always land on both feet, I suspect he strarted scouting around as soon as the Romney “landslide” did not materialize
Being on TV is only a being “human ad” for his election consulting service(s). He’s still cashing in from being on the team during the two Clinton presidential wins. Much of his work is done outside if the US
It’s a fascinating read, although they get a number of things incorrect. I am not terribly surprised, since glass is a misunderstood material. If it’s flowing, it’s not glass. Glass doesn’t have a melting temperature, it has a glass transition temperature. :)
The interior of the flow is still a melt (i.e., super-cooled liquid below the crystallization point, although I can’t say for sure if the interior is totally super-cooled in this case since rock/glass can be a fantastic thermal insulator). The outside, however, is a glass - hence the breaking noises.
It may be because I only slept for 3 hours, but I’m not getting your point on the Pew report. It doesn’t seem to state that the AA churches are Evangelical.
It may be because I only slept for 3 hours, but I’m not getting your point on the Pew report. It doesn’t seem to state that the AA churches are Evangelical.
I think I made a huge leap in thought processes by posting the charts with out posting the article first. My bad.
Here is the paragraph from the article that links the maps.
Two maps illustrate the demographic distinctiveness of the white South. The first shows the close correlation of evangelical Protestantism with the states of the former Confederacy. The second map is even more revealing. It shows the concentration of individuals who identified themselves to census takers as non-hyphenated “Americans.”
But the “Americans” are not “Native Americans” so they had to come from somewhere else. Scots-Irish?
being here (in the south) I find that (by and large) caucasians here don’t identify themselves with where there grandfathers grandfathers came from (unlike my 40+ years in Boston where there are still large enclaves of ethnic communities like The North End =’s Italian and South Boston =’s Irish, etc )
I don’t remember. Probably not, or they wouldn’t have to commission independent surveys to obtain that demographic.
If there was no Juice box, I suppose we would have checked “other”
My Jewish adopted parents insist that Jewish is a religion not an ethnicity. Even tho both are “ethnically” Jews as well as religiously observant Jews.
That is a good point (that African Americans can also be evangelical protestants), but if you look at Alabama, Texas and Georgia, it’s apparent that the concentration of EP is higher in those counties with a higher white population.
Besides, the more general point is that regardless of race, EP presence is strongly correlated with GOP voting patterns.
re: #162 iossarian
the more general point is that regardless of race, EP presence is strongly correlated with GOP voting patterns.
Perhaps because the ‘pollsters” don’t include black EP’s when doing their exit polling (they include them as African American, not by religion, but when polling whites they, the pollsters, ask what faith they ID with)
being here (in the south) I find that (by and large) caucasians here don’t identify themselves with where there grandfathers grandfathers came from (unlike my 40+ years in Boston where there are still large enclaves of ethnic communities like The North End =’s Italian and South Boston =’s Irish, etc )
I’ve thought about that, and I wonder whether (to put it a bit crudely) it’s because “the South”, post-Civil War, gives low-status whites an oppressed background to identify with, whereas in “the North”, you have to go back to Ireland, Poland etc. to find that source of oppression.
the more general point is that regardless of race, EP presence is strongly correlated with GOP voting patterns.
Perhaps because the ‘pollsters” don’t include black EP’s when doing their exit polling (they include them as African American, not by religion, but when polling whites they, the pollsters, ask what faith they ID with)
Maybe it’s because black people don’t get to vote as much in the South?
Maybe it’s because black people don’t get to vote as much in the South?
Not from my observations. Been here 14 years now and (especially) in national elections, the lines at polling places are long. My district is about 75% black thats exactly what I see at the polls on election day (as well as polling stations I drive by on my way to/ from work)
My Jewish adopted parents insist that Jewish is a religion not an ethnicity. Even tho both are “ethnically” Jews as well as religiously observant Jews.
I quit trying to understand along time ago.
Jewish is an ethnicity, since many people who identify as Jewish are not religious, and Jews did not usually identify primarily from the region of their origin.
If we identified by region, then I would be Russian and Zedushka would be Palestinian.
the more general point is that regardless of race, EP presence is strongly correlated with GOP voting patterns.
Perhaps because the ‘pollsters” don’t include black EP’s when doing their exit polling (they include them as African American, not by religion, but when polling whites they, the pollsters, ask what faith they ID with)
Is that actually the case (that they don’t ask African Americans for their religion)?
Seems a bit surprising, but then pollsters seem to report “white protestant” as a religious category, so maybe they don’t bother with AA religious subdivisions, as you say.
Not from my observations. Been here 14 years now and (especially) in national elections, the lines at polling places are long. My district is about 75% black thats exactly what I see at the polls on election day (as well as polling stations I drive by on my way to/ from work)
I was slightly kidding. The black/minority vote is obviously suppressed in certain places, but of course in any given county, if the population is majority black, then that’s what you’ll “see” at the polls.
Is that actually the case (that they don’t ask African Americans for their religion)?
Seems a bit surprising, but then pollsters seem to report “white protestant” as a religious category, so maybe they don’t bother with AA religious subdivisions, as you say.
They must as many are shocked to find out there are Black Catholics and Jews.
Is that actually the case (that they don’t ask African Americans for their religion)?
Seems a bit surprising, but then pollsters seem to report “white protestant” as a religious category, so maybe they don’t bother with AA religious subdivisions, as you say.
I got polled twice (post election) while here (in the south) and after a few basic questions asked if I was affiliated with a religion ((in 30+ years of voting in the north, not once))
I have a neighbor who is black as well as a friend who is black and ran for local office. Neither was asked the religion question
((this is why this topic interests me because we, me, the neighbor and the friend, had had this discussion) ((( btw ,, the neighbor is a Dem and the friend who ran for office ran as a Repub)))
It probably depends on the pollster to some extent. A population survey would have to ask everyone, but if a political pollster has decided that religion’s only a deciding factor for whites, then they might be the only group to get that question. When each question costs $X, you have to decide what’s important.
It probably depends on the pollster to some extent. A population survey would have to ask everyone, but if a political pollster has decided that religion’s only a deciding factor for whites, then they might be the only group to get that question. When each question costs $X, you have to decide what’s important.
And there’s the rub
With the AA population consistently voting 90-95% Dem there’s no reason (in the pollsters minds) to delve further the “why”
Where the “white” vote is split, they (the pollsters) want to break down the “how come”
Jewish is an ethnicity, since many people who identify as Jewish are not religious, and Jews did not usually identify primarily from the region of their origin.
If we identified by region, then I would be Russian and Zedushka would be Palestinian.
And it gets trickier if you want to include ancestral home language.
Clear and a bit below freezing this morning in Philly-land. (Where according to some the national symbol is a crying sports fan.)
Anyone a reader of Charlie Stross’ “Laundry” series? SF (secret history genre) mix of bureaucracy, spies, IT tech, and Lovecraftian horror. Just finished _The Fuller Memorandum_ last night and some of the earlier comments in this thread sort of reminded me of that. :)
And it gets trickier if you want to include ancestral home language.
Trickier still if you start working in further human mobility. For example, some of the Pilgrims self-exiled to the Netherlands before coming to the New World. And in more modern times you get people who have children while working overseas who thus often have dual citizenship.
So I guess it would depend on what you’re trying to track, residency, or cultural heritage. And since the latter is taught and not genetic, that can take odd hops pretty easily.
Greets and saluts from the NYC metro area. Woke up to find that Morris was released from Fox news. Yes, Dick, your services are no longer warranted.
Can’t imagine why. Maybe being so incredibly wrong in your projections and prognostication was finally hitting home with the Fox News higher ups who realized that being that wrong could be bad for business.
Then again, they’ll probably replace him with someone who’s younger, shinier, and has great gams. That’s the Fox way.
In any event, it’s no great loss for me since I haven’t watched Fox News in years, except to watch the excerpts of their stupendously wrong predictions.
Greets and saluts from the NYC metro area. Woke up to find that Morris was released from Fox news. Yes, Dick, your services are no longer warranted.
Can’t imagine why. Maybe being so incredibly wrong in your projections and prognostication was finally hitting home with the Fox News higher ups who realized that being that wrong could be bad for business.
Then again, they’ll probably replace him with someone who’s younger, shinier, and has great gams. That’s the Fox way.
In any event, it’s no great loss for me since I haven’t watched Fox News in years, except to watch the excerpts of their stupendously wrong predictions.
That’s one of the myriad things I don’t get about Fox News. Somewhere, someone must have known that all of the “promote only the polls that show Romney winning” was a bad idea. But that conflicts with Fox’s primary purpose: rake in tons of ad money by promoting the conservative POV as “news.”
So they bring on idiots like Morris, Palin, et. al., to relentless cheerlead and then ditch them when reality sets in. I mean, it’s not like they’re going to replace them with people who are more rational. Eric Erickson’s recent hire is a prime example of that.
I guess at the end of the day, you won’t go broke selling this fantasy world Fox has concocted to conservatives who, over the last 20 years or so, have had their heads in the sand.
I guess if people keep supporting a political party that fights evolution, ignores Constitutional law like Roe v Wade, and worships guns like Jesus, they don’t really care about how messed up their only “news” source is.
That’s one of the myriad things I don’t get about Fox News. Somewhere, someone must have known that all of the “promote only the polls that show Romney winning” was a bad idea. But that conflicts with Fox’s primary purpose: rake in tons of ad money by promoting the conservative POV as “news.”
So they bring on idiots like Morris, Palin, et. al., to relentless cheerlead and then ditch them when reality sets in. I mean, it’s not like they’re going to replace them with people who are more rational. Eric Erickson’s recent hire is a prime example of that.
I guess at the end of the day, you won’t go broke selling this fantasy world Fox has concocted to conservatives who, over the last 20 years or so, have had their heads in the sand.
I guess if people keep supporting a political party that fights evolution, ignores Constitutional law like Roe v Wade, and worships guns like Jesus, they don’t really care about how messed up their only “news” source is.
They’re not looking for truth, they are looking for reinforcement of their chosen belief set. FOX caters to that, and thus gets to rake in the advertising income that goes with those programs.
They’re not looking for truth, they are looking for reinforcement of their chosen belief set. FOX caters to that, and thus gets to rake in the advertising income that goes with those programs.
You nailed it. An unsophisticated audience is a goldmine to advertisers.
You nailed it. An unsophisticated audience is a goldmine to advertisers.
Not necessarily unsophisticated. Just not looking to be intellectually challenged in that area and/or very willing to accept emotional-based programming in those areas. I know FOX-bots that are well educated and outside of certain no-go areas are *very* rational about most topics. Just don’t wander into the mental minefields.
Does that dolt realize that he just Godwined his own position? It’s Obama that wants to spend ‘the citizens’ money on the helpless, and the TPGOP that does not.
Does that dolt realize that he just Godwined his own position? It’s Obama that wants to spend ‘the citizens’ money on the helpless, and the TPGOP that does not.
The wingnuts believe that “Obamacare” means DETH PANELZ.
Last night reminded me of something. While I’ve been so busy looking at wingnuts on the right that I’ve been ignoring how many weirdo, and delusional moonbats we have on the left. Maybe it’s the Vicodin.
Racing to the bottom I see. Already maximizing its stay on bottom comments. Outstanding work, at that.
I was surprised to see Charles leave it around. Banhammer for it and aigle can’t be too far off, particularly after aiglebot’s last bit of spam about Ed Koch’s obituary in the WaPo being distorted in its choice of headline.
Last night reminded me of something. While I’ve been so busy looking at wingnuts on the right that I’ve been ignoring how many weirdo, and delusional moonbats we have on the left. Maybe it’s the Vicodin.
I just call them all crazy people. I try not to bother breaking them up into their own little groups. Less effort expended that way.
Racing to the bottom I see. Already maximizing its stay on bottom comments. Outstanding work, at that.
I was surprised to see Charles leave it around. Banhammer for it and aigle can’t be too far off, particularly after aiglebot’s last bit of spam about Ed Koch’s obituary in the WaPo being distorted in its choice of headline.
Charles said he would leave jackie around for us to laugh at and downding. I wish that Stinky would just club the aigle spambot. The stinklinks that it spams here do not stimulate any productive conversations, just poo fights.
Racing to the bottom I see. Already maximizing its stay on bottom comments. Outstanding work, at that.
I was surprised to see Charles leave it around. Banhammer for it and aigle can’t be too far off, particularly after aiglebot’s last bit of spam about Ed Koch’s obituary in the WaPo being distorted in its choice of headline.
I think he decided it was amusing to leave around for a little bit as a Lizard chew toy.
Racing to the bottom I see. Already maximizing its stay on bottom comments. Outstanding work, at that.
I was surprised to see Charles leave it around. Banhammer for it and aigle can’t be too far off, particularly after aiglebot’s last bit of spam about Ed Koch’s obituary in the WaPo being distorted in its choice of headline.
Last night reminded me of something. While I’ve been so busy looking at wingnuts on the right that I’ve been ignoring how many weirdo, and delusional moonbats we have on the left. Maybe it’s the Vicodin.
It’s mostly that the left doesn’t tend to elect its moonbats, whereas the right elects the wingnuts.
Some of it is electoral in nature. In primaries the GOP has made it its matra that if you lose, it’s because you’re not conservative enough, so they’ve gotten progressively loonier and moving further to the extreme right. That gets amplified in the general elections, and particularly in the 2008 and 2012 presidential elections. In both cases, the GOP candidates were seen as not being sufficiently pure in GOP conservative values, so they lost, rejecting the counter argument that they lost because they were too extreme to the right and weren’t moderate enough.
With Democrats, it’s worked in the opposite direction. If the candidates lose in primaries, it’s because they’re not moderate enough, so it’s a move towards the center.
It’s mostly that the left doesn’t tend to elect its moonbats, whereas the right elects the wingnuts.
And gives them cable TV shows.
This is true.
After the national humiliation of Mondale in 1984, the centrist and conservative Dems made a deliberate effort to marginalize and kick out the loonies and moonbats. You might have the occasional one in elected office somewhere, but by and large the Dems in power are centrists.
OTOH, the right wing has not only openly appealed to its loonies and worked hard to get them elected, but they built AM talk radio around them and gave them an entire news network.
Belaid was a leading member of the Popular Front, a leftist political alliance, and a vocal critic of the Islamist Ennahda party, which leads Tunisia’s government. In a recent television interview on the Nessma satellite channel, Belaid accused Ennahda of giving a “green light” to political assassinations.
The day before his death, Belaid warned that Tunisia could soon be engulfed by political violence, and he called for a national conference to address the subject, Tunisia’s As Sabah daily reported on Wednesday.
Rights groups and leftist politicians like Belaid have accused the Ennahda-led government of being too lax in its approach to political and religious violence.
Geez louise. Every smartphone has gps features that can be turned off.
On my own smartphone, there’s a standalone gps, VZW location services, and google location services. You can disable any and all, but your phone’s mapping and other apps might not work as well (those that rely on location to provide info, search results, etc.).
Perhaps, this person’s best off getting a tinfoil hat.
After the national humiliation of Mondale in 1984, the centrist and conservative Dems made a deliberate effort to marginalize and kick out the loonies and moonbats. You might have the occasional one in elected office somewhere, but by and large the Dems in power are centrists.
OTOH, the right wing has not only openly appealed to its loonies and worked hard to get them elected, but they built AM talk radio around them and gave them an entire news network.
And now the decades of boosting the loonies has created a monster they can’t effectively kill. Minorities and moderates alike have been marginalized to the point of abandoning the party, leaving the base primarily composed of the nutbars and the libertarian-wannabes (but I repeat myself). Big difference is unlike the Democrats after Mondale, there is no effective means anymore to weed out the nuts. If anything, Citizens United has ensured that they will always have a steady funding source, because somebody will want to use his wealth as leverage to get the GOP leadership to dance to his tune or face a primary.
After the national humiliation of Mondale in 1984, the centrist and conservative Dems made a deliberate effort to marginalize and kick out the loonies and moonbats. You might have the occasional one in elected office somewhere, but by and large the Dems in power are centrists.
OTOH, the right wing has not only openly appealed to its loonies and worked hard to get them elected, but they built AM talk radio around them and gave them an entire news network.
That’s what kills me about “moderate” Republicans, particularly the ones who post here. They know that the party is being run by radicals, and they just don’t care.
By supporting the Republicans as they stand now, one basically is endorsing a rejection of both reality and compromise. Yet the “moderates” just shrug their shoulders and go “Eh, what ya gonna do?”
They should just put it under their tinfoil hat. If it keeps out government mind-control radio waves and alien indoctrination rays, I think it can handle GPS./
That’s what kills me about “moderate” Republicans, particularly the ones who post here. They know that the party is being run by radicals, and they just don’t care.
By supporting the Republicans as they stand now, one basically is endorsing a rejection of both reality and compromise. Yet the “moderates” just shrug their shoulders and go “Eh, what ya gonna do?”
Eh, they’re in two camps, at least from where I’m sitting. One camp is the “My team, right or wrong” variety, who will vote Republican and support Republicans under any circumstances. The other is the idealists/dreamers who think that there is some future turning point at which the GOP will have its “come to Jesus” moment and embrace moderation once again.
Eh, they’re in two camps, at least from where I’m sitting. One camp is the “My team, right or wrong” variety, who will vote Republican and support Republicans under any circumstances. The other is the idealists/dreamers who think that there is some future turning point at which the GOP will have its “come to Jesus” moment and embrace moderation once again.
That’s what kills me about “moderate” Republicans, particularly the ones who post here. They know that the party is being run by radicals, and they just don’t care.
By supporting the Republicans as they stand now, one basically is endorsing a rejection of both reality and compromise. Yet the “moderates” just shrug their shoulders and go “Eh, what ya gonna do?”
A lot of them (Frum?) think they can still save the patient. That’s what gives us a lot of the “well if it’s good for the party” garbage.
Given the pedigree of the people they say are responsible for these scripts, I don’t think so.
The films, written by Lawrence Kasdan and Simon Kinberg, will be released between 2015 and 2021, he continued.
[…]
Kasdan has a long association with Lucasfilm, having worked on the scripts of The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi - the second and third instalments of the first Star Wars trilogy.
It’s worth noting that TESB was very much a Kasdan script, while Jedi was shared between him and Lucas. Kasdan also was primary scriptwriter for Raiders of the Lost Ark.
That being said, keep him out of the director’s chair - those efforts have turned out to be disastrous at times.
Let me get this straight…you want to have a cell phone (and probably an iPhone because they have an app for fucking everything), but you don’t want to have the GPS enabled because you’re worried about what…a drone strike on you?
Why am I not surprised that this idiot doesn’t know that if you block the GPS signal being received by the phone, you are also going to be blocking the the signal from the cell tower. Might as well turn the phone off.
Plenty of overlap between the camps. The “team players” will respond to accusations that the party is too extreme by offering token signs of moderation as what the party needs to win voters back, while the “moderates” respond to suggestions that they’d be happier in the DNC or a third party with snorts about how they’ll never vote for a Democrat and voting third party is just throwing your vote away.
They dropped the fucking iron!??!!11ty! I loved that piece. Stable, functional, and it had a nice handle for picking it up and knocking down my brothers’ hotels as I stomped out each number in my roll.
Why am I not surprised that this idiot doesn’t know that if you block the GPS signal being received by the phone, you are also going to be blocking the the signal from the cell tower. Might as well turn the phone off.
Some moron watched too many spy movies “omg they’re tracking him because of his phone!” They don’t even need the GPS, they can just track the signal if they want.
Why am I not surprised that this idiot doesn’t know that if you block the GPS signal being received by the phone, you are also going to be blocking the the signal from the cell tower. Might as well turn the phone off.
The feds can turn your phone on remotely and not even wake up the screen. There’s a chip in every phone that allows this. Even taking the battery out doesn’t help. And also the flu shots. They put nano-chips in the vaccine that allow them to track you.
They dropped the fucking iron!??!!11ty! I loved that piece. Stable, functional, and it had a nice handle for picking it up and knocking down my brothers’ hotels as I stomped out each number in my roll.
Who still actually uses an iron? Except for me, that is.
Iranian president says Tehran has achieved nuke capability, but adds he is uninterested in attacking the “Zionist entity.”
…The world must now relate to Iran as an atomic power, Ahmadinejad told Al-Ahram, as it is “already a nuclear state.” He said that Tehran does not seek a military confrontation with Israel, and did not threaten to strike the “Zionist entity.” In fact, Al-Ahram quoted him as saying, all of Iran’s military capabilities are “defensive”.
“We disagree with the occupation and discrimination and massacres against the people,” he said. “Zionists are playing a special role in deceiving the world and they know what they are doing in the US and Europe. They are taking over the places of wealth, money, and politics in deceiving the world and strive to dominate all of these sectors through the destruction of cultures, economies, and wars.”
I own Boardwalk and Park Place.
You argument is invalid.
Ah, the memories.
Pfft.
Everyone knows the winning strategy in Monopoly is to become a slumlord. Buy the cheap properties (Mediterranean/Baltic and Oriental/Vermont/Connecticut) and build hotels on them as fast as possible. No one will stand a chance. Hehe.
Who still actually uses an iron? Except for me, that is.
I need an iron. And a new ironing board. Mine are somewhere in storage from my last move and it’s killing me to have to use the dryer to fluff my clothes before I wear them.
I looked at that earlier. I think it’s just sensational reporting, He seems to be saying they have nuclear technologies (centrifuges, reactors, etc) which is technically correct. We’ll see what happens with the upcoming North Korea nuke bomb test. In the past there have been allegations that the Norks are testing Iranian weapons, so that might be possible this time too.
I don;t think there’s much doubt Iran is working towards a bomb but they’re not there yet.
The financially struggling U.S. Postal Service announced Wednesday that it plans to stop delivering mail on Saturdays — but will continue delivering packages — starting Aug. 1.
Unless forbidden to do so by Congress, which has moved in the past to prohibit five-day-a-week delivery, the agency for the first time will delivery mail only Monday through Friday. The move will save about $2 billion a year for the postal service, which has suffered tens of billions of dollars in losses in recent years with the advent of the Internet and e-commerce, officials said.
“The American public understands the financial challenges of the Postal Service and supports these steps as a responsible and reasonable approach to improving our financial situation,” postmaster general Patrick R. Donahoe said at a news conference. “The Postal Service has a responsibility to take the steps necessary to return to long-term financial stability and ensure the continued affordability of the U.S. Mail.”
The postal service plans to continue Saturday delivery of packages, which remain a profitable and growing part of the delivery business. Post offices would remain open on Saturdays so that customers can drop off mail or packages, buy postage stamps, or access their post office boxes, officials said. But hours likely would be reduced at thousands of smaller locations, they said.
WASHINGTON (CNNMoney)
The U.S. Postal Service plans to stop delivering and collecting letters and other first-class mail on Saturdays beginning Aug. 5, although packages will continue to be delivered.
It will mark the end of an era for the agency, which started Saturday delivery in 1863.
Bluster, as usual. He may have worked some of the enriched uranium above the LEU levels, but how much? No one knows. They’re expanding their centrifuge and enrichment capabilities, as well as spreading them out to avoid targeting for potential disruption attacks by the West.
No one knows whether he’s got usable plans to build a nuke either, let alone a delivery capacity. It’s possible they got a design through the AQ Khan network or via North Korea, but having a design and building one are two distinct challenges.
He could threaten with a bomb in a cargo container but that’s a one-off - since the retaliation would likely result in turning much of Iran’s military sites into ruins. Adapting a nuke to a missile is a different ballgame, as we’ve seen with the Iranian problems with their missile tech.
Similar issues with North Korean claims about nukes and missile tech. The North might have detonated nukes underground but their capabilities to deliver a warhead are less certain.
Some of it is electoral in nature. In primaries the GOP has made it its matra that if you lose, it’s because you’re not conservative enough, so they’ve gotten progressively loonier and moving further to the extreme right. That gets amplified in the general elections, and particularly in the 2008 and 2012 presidential elections. In both cases, the GOP candidates were seen as not being sufficiently pure in GOP conservative values, so they lost, rejecting the counter argument that they lost because they were too extreme to the right and weren’t moderate enough.
With Democrats, it’s worked in the opposite direction. If the candidates lose in primaries, it’s because they’re not moderate enough, so it’s a move towards the center.
Which has resulted in the center moving right. It’s why Obama would have been a moderate conservative thirty years ago and today he’s a ‘leftist’ even to ‘moderates’.
Weekend service wont particularly be missed, but it is interesting to watch people complain about how their local post office can’t be shuttered because it will mean people have to travel to other locations more distant. Monetizing locations that ought to be closed is something they’ve been working on but local politicians don’t want to see their branches closed, even if it makes sense from a business perspective.
That’s one of the problems with the post office. They’ve got to cut somewhere, and their options are limited all while providing regular service to all corners of the nation even as the need for mail service has declined with e-payments and email generally. First class mail usage has declined tremendously in the past few years, but the infrastructure costs are still there.
Then, there’s the Congressional attitude towards the USPS, including the need to cut costs, workforce, and legacy costs (pensions), even as the need to provide daily service is omnipresent.
Here, have a dark side point. In fact, have all the dark side points. Take a few of Varek’s. I’m sure he can spare them. ;)
Remember the time Leia was Jabba’s sex slave? I think it was in part 3 which was really part 6, but they used space-time travel to film the later movies with 8 bit and 16 bit graphics, while the earlier movies in the series were filmed with 32 bit technology. The final film, if it’s ever made, will be a silent movie in black and white.
That’s part 1 of the vote. They’ve got to get passage of the proposal in the House of Lords before it becomes official. Still, it’s a monumental change in attitudes and one that should be applauded.
From the time she was 8, Libby Phelps Alvarez traveled the country protesting funerals. Like other members of the family-based Westboro Baptist Church, she often crashed the funerals of fallen soldiers.
“They think that they’re fighting for a nation that supports homosexuality,” Alvarez told TODAY, explaining the rationale behind the protests.
Now, Alvarez has left the inflammatory Kansas-based church started by her grandfather and travels the world with her new husband experiencing simple acts once forbidden by her former cult-like religion – like getting a haircut. She also has gotten her ears pierced.
“Monetizing locations that ought to be closed is something they’ve been working on but local politicians don’t want to see their branches closed, even if it makes sense from a business perspective.”
They did something like that here in Twin Falls. They moved all the sorting to Boise, even mail for local delivery. Did not make the local Pols happy. On the other hand, a couple of private express delivery companies sprang up to fill the perceived gap in mail delivery time.
Fun fact;
The USPS if failing specifically because of a requirement the GOP forced on them in 2006ish.
Fun Fact x2: If the USPS didn’t exist, the cost of mailing a birthday card to grandma from New York to Florida would be more expensive than the card itself.
When you need to ship low-weight packages to residential customers, consider efficient, economical FedEx SmartPost shipping service. By utilizing the U.S. Postal Service® (USPS) for final delivery, FedEx SmartPost reaches every U.S. address, including P.O. boxes and military APO, FPO and DPO destinations. You can even use FedEx SmartPost to ship to Alaska, Hawaii and all U.S. territories.
Yeah…the naked bacon dance isn’t a fun one…I dress for spattering grease. Though I will say I’ve mastered the one handed pouring of hot tea…though it’s become so much of a habit I’m afraid I’ll have muscle memory kick in and cup my balls with one hand when I’m fully dressed at a function and someone offers me a cup of coffee.
Fun Fact x2: If the USPS didn’t exist, the cost of mailing a birthday card to grandma from New York to Florida would be more expensive than the card itself.
Well, the cost of mailing a birthday card to Grandma is higher than the cost of the card itself.
It’s simply subsidized by your fellow post office users, because we live in a godless Socialist hellscape.
Somalia on Tuesday jailed for one year a woman who said she was raped by security forces and a journalist who interviewed her, saying they were guilty of insulting the state. “We sentence her for offending state institutions by claiming she was raped,” Judge Ahmed Adan told the court in the capital Mogadishu. “She will spend one year in prison after finishing the breastfeeding of her baby.”
Freelance journalist Abdiaziz Abdinuur, who is already in detention, was to begin serving his sentence immediately.
“The court finds that he offended state institutions by making a false interview, and entering the house of a woman whose husband was not present,” the judge added.
Rights groups have condemned the case as “politically motivated”.
Several companies I do business with over the Internet use that service. Orders that would normally take 5-7 days to arrive by traditional (USPS) ground get here in usually 3-4 days.
Now that there’s an opening at Fox News for someone who always gets things wrong, maybe they’ll hire Michael Brown, the head of FEMA during Hurricane Katrina.
Who had the audacity to joke, whine and complain about the power outage at the Superdome during the Super Bowl - making references to Katrina. Amazing!
Who had the audacity to joke, whine and complain about the power outage at the Superdome during the Super Bowl - making references to Katrina. Amazing!
Who had the audacity to joke, whine and complain about the power outage at the Superdome during the Super Bowl - making references to Katrina. Amazing!
That guy’s a real assclown. A great reason why you shouldn’t put your cronies in charge of an emergency relief administration.
LGF wasn’t the only place with crazed lizards yesterday.
A park official says two people have been hospitalized after being attacked by a giant komodo dragon that wandered into the office of a wildlife park in eastern Indonesia.
An official at Komodo National Park, Heru Rudiharto, said Wednesday the 2-meter-long (6 ½ foot-long) komodo dragon attacked a park ranger after walking into the office on Tuesday. It then attacked another park employee who came to help him. Both were badly bitten and were evacuated to a hospital on Bali Island.
The Post Office thing is thicker than having to pay those retirements monies…
[Link: www.nytimes.com…]
But even if the post office were to get these changes from Congress, including eliminating Saturday delivery and the multibillion-dollar payments on future retiree programs, the agency would still be losing money, it said. Since 2007, it has lost $25 billion — $20 billion of which is attributable to the payments for future benefits, required by law since 2006.
Police say Tawana Bourne, 30, was in possession of a .380 caliber handgun when they arrived at the 3075 Berlin Turnpike restaurant around 8 p.m. in response to an argument involving a firearm.
Bourne was at the restaurant with her child and got into an argument with another woman who was also there with a child, Newington police said.
When police arrived, they separated the two women and seized Bourne’s weapon. She has a valid Connecticut pistol permit for the weapon, police said, which was also seized.
See, she would have been more polite if the other mom had also had a gun. Preferably an AR-15, since those are light and pointable for even the most waif-like woman.
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Lebanon’s militant Islamist Hezbollah movement on Wednesday dismissed Bulgaria’s accusation that it had carried out a bomb attack that killed five Israelis last year, saying it was part of an Israeli smear campaign.
Deputy Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem said the accusation was part of “allegations and incitements and accusations against Hezbollah” pursued by Israel after it had failed to defeat Hezbollah militarily.
“All these accusations against Hezbollah will have no effect, and do not change the facts,” Qassem said. “We will not submit to these pressures and we will not change our priorities. Our compass will remain directed towards Israel.”
Foreign invasion? You mean the thing that hasn’t happened on the mainland of this country in two centuries? Yes, I’m aware of Japan invading part of Alaska during WWII.
For Christ’s sakes, China couldn’t invade us if we spotted them the fleet from D-Day.
They want Red Dawn to be a “based on a true story” so bad and they want even badder to have this fantasy of liberals collaborating with an invading enemy.
Little Known Fun Fact: The USPS subsidizes, and by proxy fellow post office users, mailings for corporations/companies and newspapers by giving them bulk rates.
They want Red Dawn to be a “based on a true story” so bad and they want even badder to have this fantasy of liberals collaborating with an invading enemy.
I seriously want to ask these nuts how an armed citizen could stand a chance against a tank, a fighter/bomber, or armored vehicles in general but it is really a waste of time.
re: #319 Brother Holy Cruise Missile of Mild Acceptance
I seriously want to ask these nuts how an armed citizen could stand a chance against a tank, a fighter/bomber, or armored vehicles in general but it is really a waste of time.
Besides being completely outgunned, how exactly do these anti-gubbermint 2nd Amendment-types, who are living across 50 states, expect to assemble into an “organized” element?
It’s a martyr complex. It’s why they compare Obama to some of the worst people in history and why they compare their “plight” to some of the victims of said people whether they’re European Jews in occupied Europe, Soviet dissidents, etc.The reality is they’re just a bunch of butt hurt wingnuts who can’t stand that their idea of the country is changing.
Besides being completely outgunned, how exactly do these anti-gubbermint 2nd Amendment-types, who are living across 50 states, expect to assemble into an “organized” element?
I’m sure Twitter will be involved somehow. 1 Tweet if by land, 2 Tweets if by sea or some shit.
Besides being completely outgunned, how exactly do these anti-gubbermint 2nd Amendment-types, who are living across 50 states, expect to assemble into an “organized” element?
Not to mention that as paranoid as they seem, how the hell could they even trust another group, in another State, that they only know through the Internet?
Because the USPS is cheaper. And if the GOP gets its way, all mail, package delivery, etc., will go up exponentially. See how much it will cost to get stuff to rural areas.
After Anonymous posted sensitive credentials of over 4,600 banking executives to a government Web site on Super Bowl Sunday, the Federal Reserve acknowledged the attack in a Tuesday morning statement to affected individuals and press.
However, while a spokesperson from the Federal Reserve told The Huffington Post that Anonymous’ claim to the hack’s importance was “overstated,” information security professionals that serve financial institutions are saying the exact opposite—and are not best pleased with the Federal Reserve.
ZDNet has now learned that the compromised and exposed database belongs to The St. Louis Fed Emergency Communications System.
Cool, neat interview with her. It really contrasted positively with the one I saw on Clarence Thomas after Thomas released his book 5-6 years back. She’s very positive despite the shit she’s gotten past and present from assholes who think she’s just made it because of AA.
Not to mention that as paranoid as they seem, how the hell could they even trust another group, in another State, that they only know through the Internet?
If I were just a little more dishonest, I’d be on RWNJ sites turning up their paranoia one milli-ohm per day. Caught myself starting that here the other night.
No, Patriots, we didn’t encode the rail designs with any transponder characteristics back at Picatinny, I swear.
Which will perversely and adversely affect all those red counties in the middle of nowhere (like sparsely populated states in the West). And it will hurt the bottom line for many businesses that rely on package delivery (Amazon being just the largest of many). It would also force companies like Amazon to build out their own distribution mode to deliver items in the same kind of timely fashion that we’ve become accustomed to courtesy of the final leg being the USPS in so many instances.
I am thinking he might have missed the results of the last election. Details, man, details. All things in life are in the details.
These delusional asshats truly believe that SCOTUS will rule in favor of Orly Taitz and overturn the election. They are all a bunch of complete raving birthermaniacs.
These delusional asshats truly believe that SCOTUS will rule in favor of Orly Taitz and overturn the election. They are all a bunch of complete raving birthermaniacs.
Yes, because a majority Democratic Senate is going to vote for a bill that outlaws unions nationwide:
Okay, this actually shows you why Rand Paul is full of shit. He claims that he would have opposed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 since it was too much federal intrusion but here he is now introducing a federal union busting legislation. What happened to let the states decide shithead? Oh wait, that doesn’t matter when you have your agenda. God I hate this slimy hypocrite. You can be damn sure though that his opponent will make use of this though. Lot of coal miners in Kentucky who really appreciate being able to unionize.
These delusional asshats truly believe that SCOTUS will rule in favor of Orly Taitz and overturn the election. They are all a bunch of complete raving birthermaniacs.
Indeed. But that’s been going on since Obama had the audacity to win in 2008. While I am still offended by these assholes, I mostly read and laugh (especially that douchecanoe Taitz. She cracks me up.)
In this case, I was referring to Bibi’s last win. The hardliners in Israel are not doing quite as well as that guy must think they are. But, I guess that parallels the US, because the TPGOP ain’t doing all that well, either.
Passing it is absolutely irrelevant to Paul’s political ambitions. Getting it introduced fulfills his mission to build up a “resume” so as to run for the WH. That’s what it’s about. He can then use the fact that he didn’t get it passed as fodder for his followers to push it nationally as an issue in 2016.
Passing it is absolutely irrelevant to Paul’s political ambitions. Getting it introduced fulfills his mission to build up a “resume” so as to run for the WH. That’s what it’s about. He can then use the fact that he didn’t get it passed as fodder for his followers to push it nationally as an issue in 2016.
True enough. I just would love to see his opponent use it to get him beaten in 2016. Not sure how popular he is in Kentucky. I imagine quite unfortunately.
Okay, this actually shows you why Rand Paul is full of shit. He claims that he would have opposed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 since it was too much federal intrusion but here he is now introducing a federal union busting legislation. What happened to let the states decide shithead? Oh wait, that doesn’t matter when you have your agenda. God I hate this slimy hypocrite. You can be damn sure though that his opponent will make use of this though. Lot of coal miners in Kentucky who really appreciate being able to unionize.
Okay, this actually shows you why Rand Paul is full of shit. He claims that he would have opposed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 since it was too much federal intrusion but here he is now introducing a federal union busting legislation. What happened to let the states decide shithead? Oh wait, that doesn’t matter when you have your agenda. God I hate this slimy hypocrite. You can be damn sure though that his opponent will make use of this though. Lot of coal miners in Kentucky who really appreciate being able to unionize.
Dems & Libs call Chris Christie obese but it’s not racist. However, speaking the truth about Obama’s laziness is. #LiberalLogic#tcot#TGDN
— I’m Mex-Cellent (@StLNetworkGuru) February 6, 2013
You will do what Greg tells the Israeli government to tell you to do.
/
I just put Greg on the DERP list. Let’s see if he freaks out. Or maybe he’ll see that Dana Loesch and Michelle Malkin are on there and he’ll feel flattered.
@StLNetworkGuru Dems & Libs call Chris Christie obese but it’s not racist. However, speaking the truth about Obama’s laziness is. #LiberalLogic#tcot#TGDN
Right-wing racism, or right-wing lack-of-two-brain-cells-to-rub-together?
Uh because he is obese. And you can’t call Obama lazy when you’re calling him a tyrant for the new gun measures. Stupid right wing twits. Pick a narrative and stay with it.
Uh because he is obese. And you can’t call Obama lazy when you’re calling him a tyrant for the new gun measures. Stupid right wing twits. Pick a narrative and stay with it.
Uh because he is obese. And you can’t call Obama lazy when you’re calling him a tyrant for the new gun measures. Stupid right wing twits. Pick a narrative and stay with it.
One moment that screech that he’s doing too many things and the next moment they are screeching that he’s lazy. The circular logic is painful.
One moment that screech that he’s too many things and the next moment they are screeching that he’s lazy. The circular logic is painful.
Meanwhile, Christie himself would probably tell anyone who said that his critics were racist for calling him fat to STFU and go do something productive with their lives.
Meanwhile, Christie himself would probably tell anyone who said that his critics were racist for calling him fat to STFU and go do something productive with their lives.
I disagree with Christie on a policy level but I have to say I like his attitude sometimes.
Yes, because a majority Democratic Senate is going to vote for a bill that outlaws unions nationwide:
being fair it doesn’t outlaw unions.
It just removes all their teeth. In simple, a union can’t negotiate for a closed shop BUT any negotiation a union makes must be for the benefit of all the employees to which the benefit might apply.
Oh, and the cuts also remove the requirement that companies not give non-union members who would receive the benefits of union negotiation greater benefits.
Since that was rather tangled, let me simplify. A union can get all widget-makers a minimum of $X per hour with raises based on experience and additional qualifications. Requirements of law say all widget-makers get the minimum regardless of union membership. Right now the law says that (a) the union can (but are not guaranteed to) get an agreement from the shop that all widget-makers be union members, and (b) the shop will not pay some widget-makers greater amounts than the agreement (especially as a condition of not being union members.)
The council on Tuesday passed a resolution to immediately rename Confederate Park and Jefferson Davis Park in downtown Memphis and Nathan Bedford Forrest Park, which lies just a few miles away. The vote was 9-0 with three members abstaining.
The resolution changes the name of Confederate Park to Memphis Park; Jefferson Davis Park to Mississippi River Park; and Nathan Bedford Forrest Park to Health Sciences Park.
Forrest, a Confederate general and cavalry leader, was a slave trader before the war and the KKK’s first Grand Wizard. He also is accused of massacring dozens of black Union soldiers who tried to surrender at the battle at Fort Pillow in 1864. Davis was president of the confederacy.
“The parks are changed. It’s done,” said Councilman Lee Harris, The Commercial Appeal reported. “We removed controversial names and named them something that is less controversial.”
The new names may be only temporary until more permanent names are chosen, the Memphis Daily News reported.
Council members made no secret of their attempt to vote for and finalize the move, which normally would require three hearings, in order to beat an attempt by two state lawmakers in Nashville to block such name changes.
The city council even voted to approve its minutes Tuesday to prevent the measure from being reconsidered at its next meeting.
The “Tennessee Heritage Protection Act of 2013” bill, already introduced in the state legislature, would prohibit name changes to any “statue, monument, memorial, nameplate, plaque, historic flag display,school, street, bridge,building, park preserve, or reserve which has been erected for, or named or dedicated in honor of, any historical military figure,historical military event, military organization, or military unit” on public property, according toThe Memphis Flyer.
The bill specifically included the “War Between the States,” in its language, a reference to the view that the Civil War was fought between two separate countries.
Anyone remember who actually won the Civil War? It wasn’t the South, except that those in the South think that they did (or should have).
Pretty much whenever someone posts a story about a crazy Virginia Republican, I usually assume it’s him. Really telling that he nearly was their nominee for Senate against Warner in 2008. But yeah the GOP is “moderating.”
A bill that would give local law enforcement the authority to arrest federal agents attempting to seize guns from Utah residents was officially unveiled Tuesday — along with an analysis from the state’s legal counsel warning of its likely unconstitutionality.
dug back through his tweets. He’s celebrating the Elhaik publication. Kind of a shame that Ostrer dismboweled that argument(///).
(Expanding. Elhaik of Johns Hopkins University published a study of gene mapping that he says supports the Khazar argument, because of all the central European genes. He dismisses the middle eastern genes also found - something Ostrer (with significantly greater experience and qualification) points out means they are, indeed, Jewish.
In short, Jews dispersed across the world, and there is no one true kind of jew.
dug back through his tweets. He’s celebrating the Elhaik publication. Kind of a shame that Ostrer dismboweled that argument(///).
(Expanding. Elhaik of Johns Hopkins University published a study of gene mapping that he says supports the Khazar argument, because of all the central European genes. He dismisses the middle eastern genes also found - something Ostrer (with significantly greater experience and qualification) points out means they are, indeed, Jewish.
In short, Jews dispersed across the world, and there is no one true kind of jew.
The Khazars were pretty badass. They probably carried around Genghis Kahn DNA.
It boggles me still that we condemn the Nazi banner but allow and even praise the stars and bars.
If the Stars and Bars was a foreign flag, we would but because people want to romanticize what their ancestors did, I think that plays a large part of it. That and people who can’t fucking let go that the CSA lost the war and probably inevitably would have imploded on itself.
Anyone remember who actually won the Civil War? It wasn’t the South, except that those in the South think that they did (or should have).
That’s really lame. A bill preventing the renaming of parks? Really there are so many people in this country that need to get over the Civil War. The CSA lost and they lost big and we should be grateful for that. Every day that slavery existed in this country was a blight on the ideals we were founded upon. But you gotta love a bunch of sympathizers of a “country” founded to preserve “states rights” telling localities that they can’t rename their parks if they so wanted to.
The Khazars were pretty badass. They probably carried around Genghis Kahn DNA.
Yes. But that’s not… ok, dunno if you missed it but there’s been a bit of noise from some about “true” jews. Khazars aren’t “true” jews, but were allegedly people who were so impressed by their superiors (the relative handful that fled to that area) that they took up their ways. But in the end they aren’t really of the tribes and so shouldn’t be allowed say in matters of import.
Of utmost significance here is that this tends to be a Palestinian argument against Israel’s right to existence. Since most of the world’s Jews are Khazars they aren’t from Israel and hence aren’t really returning - they’re just seizing land that doesn’t really belong to them.
Yes, the Khazar argument is another run of anti-semitism, mostly.
It’s been partially hijacked by some racists and haredi in Israel, by the way. “Real” jews should have rights not available to the Khazar jews. Really nasty argument even if it is coming from a small (but loud) minority.
They dropped the fucking iron!??!!11ty! I loved that piece. Stable, functional, and it had a nice handle for picking it up and knocking down my brothers’ hotels as I stomped out each number in my roll.
I liked the iron because it was the most stable piece. I can’t stand those pieces that fall over all the time!
See, she would have been more polite if the other mom had also had a gun. Preferably an AR-15, since those are light and pointable for even the most waif-like woman.
Would need it to protect her brood from the giant rat that supposedly hangs out there. Not to mention that pack of gangbanging moles that hide out in that box in the corner.
//
Yes. But that’s not… ok, dunno if you missed it but there’s been a bit of noise from some about “true” jews. Khazars aren’t “true” jews, but were allegedly people who were so impressed by their superiors (the relative handful that fled to that area) that they took up their ways. But in the end they aren’t really of the tribes and so shouldn’t be allowed say in matters of import.
Of utmost significance here is that this tends to be a Palestinian argument against Israel’s right to existence. Since most of the world’s Jews are Khazars they aren’t from Israel and hence aren’t really returning - they’re just seizing land that doesn’t really belong to them.
Yes, the Khazar argument is another run of anti-semitism, mostly.
It’s been partially hijacked by some racists and haredi in Israel, by the way. “Real” jews should have rights not available to the Khazar jews. Really nasty argument even if it is coming from a small (but loud) minority.
The Jews lived in many different places so it’s normal to conclude that they picked up some of the host DNA through intermarriage and conversion.
Even if the Khazar story is true (for many years it was dismissed as a myth) it was only a small number of the chieftans that converted, not the entire tribe.
Not everyone loved Beyoncé’s Super Bowl halftime show. In fact, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals hated it – or at least, really didn’t like her Rubin Singer-designed outfit, which was mostly leather, but also incorporated iguana and python skin. “We would take a bet that if Beyoncé watched our video exposés … she’d probably not want to be seen again in anything made of snakes, lizards, rabbits, or other animals who died painfully,” PETA said. (For the record, the outfit reportedly did not contain rabbit.) The organization, already unhappy with Beyoncé for wearing mink to the presidential Inauguration, added she’d “missed the mark” on today’s trend toward “humane vegan” clothing.
If the Stars and Bars was a foreign flag, we would but because people want to romanticize what their ancestors did, I think that plays a large part of it. That and people who can’t fucking let go that the CSA lost the war and probably inevitably would have imploded on itself.
It’s not primarily the romanticization. It’s that most of the losers believed they were betrayed and established underground opposition. One of the most effective things done for that cause was the subsequent romanticization, in particular “Birth of a Nation”.
The Jews lived in many different places so it’s normal to conclude that they picked up some of the host DNA through intermarriage and conversion.
Even if the Khazar story is true (for many years it was dismissed as a myth) it was only a small number of the chieftans that converted, not the entire tribe.
Exactly. But racists and exclusionists (mis)use what they can.
There are good, valid arguments to be made for a vegetarian diet, and against things like wearing fur, factory farming, animal testing, and fast food. PETA’s more interested in causing drama.
There are good, valid arguments to be made for a vegetarian diet, and against things like wearing fur, factory farming, animal testing, and fast food. PETA’s more interested in causing drama.
PETA is the Code Pink of vegetarians. They’re so overboard it’s hilarious.
Citizens United’s National Committee for Family, Faith and Prayer filed two no-holds-barred amicus briefs last week, one in defense of Prop 8 [pdf] and one in defense of DOMA [pdf]. They were joined in both by the anti-immigrant groups Declaration Alliance and English First; WorldNetDaily affiliate the Western Center for Journalism; the Institute for Constitutional Values (founded by white supremacist ally Michael Peroutka, who also argues that the solution to school violence is to abolish schools); Gun Owners Foundation (the research wing of Gun Owners of America); the extremely and occasionally comically anti-gay Public Advocate; the birther group U.S. Justice Foundation; Protect Marriage Maryland and others. Far-right Virginia Del. Bob Marshall and Sen. Dick Black joined the DOMA brief. Both are signed by Michael Boos, general counsel of Citizens United, and by Herb Titus, an attorney with a sideline as a birther advocate.
So I guess we shouldn’t be surprised that the filings contain passages like this one, in the Prop 8 brief, arguing that laws against homosexuality affirm rather than deny the humanity of gay people:
Second, while the discrimination against Blacks in America denied them their rightful status as a member of the human race vis-à-vis their white counterparts, the discrimination against homosexuals affirmed their status as full and equal members of the human race. Indeed, the very definition of the “crime against nature,” was employed to emphasize that the sexual behavior condemned was contrary to the law of human nature. Homosexual behavior, then, while unnatural did not mean that those guilty of it were any less human.
That’s the saddest part, people who truly care about animals having no idea what PETA does in their names.
Just uninformed folks who think they’re supporting a good cause by supporting them. Well-intentioned, just ignorant, for the most part anyway. I’d rather throw my support to local adoption centers etc. than huge corps like that anyway. You have a much better chance of seeing the results of your support/donations, and know it’s not going to massive overhead and advertising campaigns.
Nice naming, looks like Frank Luntz’s work. /Sigh Leave the womens alone.
Someone did a bit (Stewart? Colbert?) last night or the night before on the Luntzification of the GOP lingo. It was hysterical. They are openly admitting what they are doing - everywhere (on everything). I mean, seriously, you can’t have that effective a propaganda machine if you keep admitting it is propaganda. Openly. (I would do a link but I am in Canada and can’t access Comedy Central.)
BOISE — The chairman of the Idaho Senate’s Education Committee, Sen. John Goedde of Coeur d’Alene, introduced legislation Tuesday to require every Idaho high-school student to read Ayn Rand’s “Atlas Shrugged” and pass a test on it to graduate from high school.
When Sen. Bob Nonini, R-Coeur d’Alene, asked Goedde why he chose that particular book, Goedde said to laughter, “That book made my son a Republican.”
Someone did a bit (Stewart? Colbert?) last night or the night before on the Luntzification of the GOP lingo. It was hysterical. They are openly admitting what they are doing - everywhere (on everything). I mean, seriously, you can’t have that effective a propaganda machine if you keep admitting it is propaganda. Openly. (I would do a link but I am in Canada and can’t access Comedy Central.)
But, please GOP…carry on.
It’s gotten to the point where everything they say, name, and propose, pretty much means the exact opposite. Anything that sounds like it’s helping the middle class or poor really fucks them over in favor of the rich. Helping women is anti-choice. Voting rights is restricting participation in elections. Defense is offense. Etcetera.
“There are two novels that can change a bookish fourteen-year old’s life: The Lord of the Rings and Atlas Shrugged. One is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world. The other, of course, involves orcs.”
— Kung Fu Monkey
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"It's striking how preoccupied Harris and VandeHei are with the perception that Politico is too 'insidery,'" Silver wrote. "My personal critique of their work cuts a little deeper than that, however. It's not that they are too 'insidery' per se, but that the perceptions of Beltway insiders, which Politico echoes and embraces, are not always very insightful or accurate. In other words, the conventional ...
As a reformed wingnut, I recall those times. There's a whole fringe camp out there full of folks just like Bill Ayers who are upset with our President for not being the far left revolutionary that they really want him to be. These hard bitten partisans are willing to stand shoulder to shoulder with the hard right right whenever the opportunity presents to fling ...
HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (KTLA) — A man killed Tuesday in a fiery car crash in Hollywood was journalist Michael Hastings, his employer said. The wreck happened near the intersection of Highland and Melrose avenues around 4:15 a.m., according to LAPD Officer Lillian Carranza. The car, presumably driven by Hastings, slammed into a tree and caught fire. “I was just coming northbound on Highland and I ...
Talking Points Memo: The Senate Select Committee on Intelligence has taken the unusual step of actively blocking a former committee aide from talking to TPM about congressional oversight of the intelligence community. At issue isn’t classified sources and methods of intelligence gathering but general information about how the committee functions — and how it should function. The committee’s refusal to allow former general counsel ...
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Google has petitioned a secret U.S. national security court to relax restrictions on the information the tech giant can disclose about government data requests, claiming such restrictions violate the company's right to free speech under the First Amendment. Google's motion, filed Tuesday with the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, is the tech giant's latest attempt to address recent media reports that suggested it gives the ...
Beyond Camp, other lawmakers scheduled to attend the rally include GOP Sens. Ted Cruz (Texas), Mike Lee (Utah) and Rand Paul (Ky.) along with Reps. Michele Bachmann (Minn.), Tim Huelskamp (Kan.) and Jim Jordan (Ohio).
More: Glenn Beck IRS Rally Gets Between Dave Camp and Sander Levin - Kelsey Snell
President Barack Obama is expected to use his speech at the iconic Brandenburg Gate on Wednesday to renew calls for a reduction in nuclear weapons. It is not the first time the president has called for a reduction in stockpiles, but by addressing the issue in a major foreign speech, Obama is hoping to rekindle the issue, which was at the center of his ...
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June 4, 2013 -- In 2010, in the journal Nature, a pair of physicists at the Santa Fe Institute showed that when the population of a city doubles, economic productivity goes up by an average of 130 percent. Not only does total productivity increase with increased population, but so does per-capita productivity. Share This: In the latest issue of Nature Communications, researchers from the ...
Senior bankers guilty of reckless misconduct should be jailed, a long-awaited report on banking commissioned by the government has recommended. The Parliamentary Commission on Banking Standards was set up by Chancellor George Osborne last year after a number of scandals involving the industry. Jail reckless bankers, standards commission urgesThe cross-party group's fifth report attacked the lack of accountability of bankers and also said some ...
LE BOURGET, France — Boeing Co. won major orders from five customers for a stretched-out version of its popular 787 Dreamliner jet at the Paris Air Show Tuesday, further evidence of a strengthening market for more expensive long-haul jets.Boeing announced the formal launch of its 787-10 program at the Paris Air Show on Tuesday and says it already has commitments for 102 jets from ...
When Laura Gambrel, 22, of Zionsville, Ind., graduated from Indiana University in May, she wanted to keep the celebration pretty low key. She didn’t walk at the ceremony, nor did she have a party because she planned to go right back to the university this coming fall for grad school. It seemed only fitting then that the one thing her mother attempted to do ...
Are you uncomfortable with ambiguity? It's a common condition, but a highly problematic one. The compulsion to quell that unease can inspire snap judgments, rigid thinking, and bad decision-making. Fortunately, new research suggests a simple antidote for this affliction: Read more literary fiction. A trio of University of Toronto scholars, led by psychologist Maja Djikic, report that people who have just read a short ...
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