Tight V. Formation
Saturday, July 19, 2008 at 9:18 AM
How Can America Break the Dependence on Foreign Oil?
at 7:49 AM
New Worlds of Warcraft Game
Thursday, July 17, 2008 at 9:44 AM
Mark Levin is a douche.
at 6:01 AM
Pearl Jam - The Real Me
From VH1 Honors: The Who
Tuesday, July 15, 2008 at 10:26 AM
PickensPlan
As someone who lived in a town that thrived on the wind power industry long before it was even considered a feasable energy source, I am getting behind this movement 100%. Many people are going to insist that T-Bone is simply promoting wind energy to grow his business. I disagree. He is someone who was heavily involved in oil and had the foresight to realize that at some point in the near future, the resource would run out.
Monday, July 14, 2008 at 11:41 AM
NC man loses his job over refusal to honor Jesse Helms...
http://www.newsobserver.com/politics/politicians/helms/story/1135443.html
RALEIGH - L.F. Eason III gave up the only job he'd ever had rather than lower a flag to honor former U.S. Sen. Jesse Helms.
Eason, a 29-year veteran of the state Department of Agriculture, instructed his staff at a small Raleigh lab not to fly the U.S. or North Carolina flags at half-staff Monday, defying a directive sent to all state agencies by Gov. Mike Easley.
When a superior ordered the lab to follow the directive, Eason decided to retire rather than pay tribute to Helms. After several hours' delay, one of Eason's employees hung the flags at half-staff.
The brouhaha began late Sunday night, when Eason e-mailed eight of his employees in the state standards lab, which calibrates measuring equipment used on things as widely varied as gasoline and hamburgers.
"Regardless of any executive proclamation, I do not want the flags at the North Carolina Standards Laboratory flown at half staff to honor Jesse Helms any time this week," Eason wrote just after midnight, according to e-mail messages released in response to a public records request.
He told his staff that he did not think it was appropriate to honor Helms because of his "doctrine of negativity, hate, and prejudice" and his opposition to civil rights bills and the federal Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.
Eason said in an interview Tuesday that he did not typically lower the flag himself, but that, as head of the lab, he supervised the technician who did. He also trained new employees on proper flag etiquette, including a one-person folding technique he learned in Boy Scouts.
When the lab opened Monday morning, the flags were not out at all. An employee called Eason's boss, Stephen Benjamin, who worked in another building in Raleigh. About 10:45 a.m., Benjamin told one of Eason's co-workers to put the flags at half-staff.
Another of Eason's superiors later drove by the lab to make sure the flags were up properly.
No one in the Governor's Office was aware of any time in recent memory when a state employee refused to lower a flag. Brian Long, a spokesman for the Agriculture Department, said Eason's refusal was unexpected.
"We've never had any conversations like that," he said.
An ultimatum
In a string of e-mail messages with his superiors, Eason was told he could either lower the flags or retire effective immediately.
Though he's only 51, Eason chose to retire, although he pleaded several times to be allowed to stay at the lab. Eason, who had worked for the Agriculture Department since graduating from college, was paid $65,235 a year as the laboratory manager.
Several people, including his wife, argued to Eason that the flags belonged to the state, as did the lab. But Eason said he felt a strong sense of ownership.
Eason and a previous boss had sketched out the building's rough design on a napkin at the Atlanta airport in 1984 after attending a national conference on weights and measures.
He then worked to get funding for it in the state budget, and he recently helped snag state money to study building another lab.
"I designed and built that lab," he said. "Even though technically the bricks and mortar belong to the state of North Carolina, I feel very strongly that everything that comes out of there is my responsibility."
It was not the first time Eason felt uneasy about lowering the flag.
A registered Democrat who frequently votes a split ticket, he said he had no problems lowering the flag for former Sen. Terry Sanford or President Reagan. But he remembers wondering whether he would be willing to lower the flag after President Nixon's death.
He never had to make that decision, since it rained both days.
Monday was sunny. And Eason was out of a job.
----------------------
Perhaps he should have burned half a cross in Helms honor instead.
at 11:29 AM
Another homophobic politician, caught sleeping with the enemy...
http://wonkette.com/401018/anti-gay-alabama-attorney-general-caught-being-gay
Anti-Gay Alabama A.G. Caught Being Gay
This may come as a shock, but a prominent anti-homosexual Republican attorney general has apparently been caught having homosexual sex intercourse with his homosexual gay male assistant. Bonus: The dude’s wife caught him, in their bed. This is the rumor that the AG’s office has officially denied, so now of course everybody is spilling the sordid details.
AG in question is Troy King, who, of course, is only interested in outlawing homosexuality and sex toys. His gay lover is either a college “buddy,” or a very young youngster and “Homecoming King” from Troy University. What are the odds of a dude named Troy King getting caught in bed with a Homecoming King from Troy University? This seems like a wacky sitcom plot, on a gay porn channel. (Is this what that Will & Grace was about?)
Sunday, July 13, 2008 at 11:06 AM
Did Bush hit the WAY BACK button?
Are we in the 70's again? Should I break out some platform shoes and start wearing wide ties?
Today's crunch feels like '70s
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 07/13/08
High oil prices, a sluggish economy, persistent inflation, an unpopular president and the Eagles are out on tour.
Sounds like a rerun of the 1970s.
But it is also a snapshot from the summer of 2008 —- even if it does conjure images from the past.
"The similarities are there," said economist Gerald Lynch of Purdue University. "That was a miserable time for the economy. And the clothes were ugly, too."
Wide ties may not be making a comeback, but hints of the era's economics are in the air.
One of the stars of that original '70s show was stagflation, a term invented to describe a mix of rapid inflation and near-stagnant growth. The word has re-entered the economic vocabulary of late.
"As far as I can see, the wheels have fallen off the wagon," said Peter Miralles, president of Atlanta Wealth Consultants. "This is as close to the '70s as we have seen in the past couple of decades."
First, the sluggishness: Gross domestic product the past two quarters has expanded by less than 1 percent. The economy shed 438,000 jobs in the first six months of the year, while the official unemployment rate has climbed to 5.5 percent.
Meanwhile, the official measure of inflation has been running slightly higher than 4 percent per year —- while energy prices have more than doubled.
Yet comparing the current moment to the 1970s can offer some reassurance: Today's numbers pale beside the Hotel California Era.
In 1975, unemployment peaked at 9 percent, fell for a while and then climbed to 7.8 percent in 1980. Inflation hit double digits in 1974 and 1975, slipped back and then roared up, cresting at more than 13 percent in 1979 and 14 percent in 1980. It was a time, too, when the nightly news rattled the American psyche.
The first half of the decade saw the revolution-promoting Weathermen, Watergate, the bitter, bloody end to the Vietnam War and the Arab oil embargo. The second half of the '70s brought the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the Iranian Revolution.
"There was a kind of extremism in the air," said Herb London, president of the Hudson Institute, a conservative, Washington-based think tank. "Conditions now are also kind of frightening. But the situation is not as extreme."
Still, today's list of potential villains sounds like a cast from the past.
The most obvious repeat offender is oil. Oil prices quadrupled in the mid-1970s, then soared again after the Iranian Revolution in 1979.
Now, U.S. troops are fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, there is renewed talk about a U.S. conflict with Iran, and oil prices are at it again. Crude has doubled in the past year, and the economy again is struggling.
"Oil was at the scene of the crime in both cases," said Jared Bernstein, senior economist at the liberal Economics Policy Institute in Washington. "If you have a police lineup, you really want to have oil in it."
And it's not just oil —- global demand has shoved prices higher on a range of commodities from rice to steel.
But inflation this time has some brand-new accomplices: the housing crash; the subprime meltdown that followed; and the crunch in credit that the meltdown triggered.
"This is a very different world," Bernstein said.
For starters, the sources of inflation are different. During the 1970s, workers —- often through powerful unions —- insisted on raises that matched higher consumer prices.
Those higher payroll costs were then added to the prices businesses charged, which were then used by workers to demand higher pay.
"You can't have a wage-price spiral without wage pressures, and we ain't got wage pressures," Bernstein said. "That is a huge difference."
It's not just that business costs don't rise as much. Companies are also less likely to pass them along.
Many are so afraid of losing customers, they don't dare raise prices as much as their costs. Instead, they slash their own costs or accept a smaller profit margin —- and potential inflation never gets to consumers.
What worries some economists is that, eventually, companies must pass along costs. Other economists argue that the official inflation numbers are wildly understating the pain consumers already feel.
"The part that concerns me the most is that the government numbers do not actually represent what's going on," said Miralles of Atlanta Wealth Consultants. "I just don't buy it."
If the plot of the rerun does mimic the original, then the pain is only getting started.
Led by then-Chairman Paul Volcker, the Federal Reserve decided that inflation was so dangerous it had to be stopped —- even if that meant choking off growth. So in 1979, interest rates were raised dramatically.
The economy spun into back-to-back recessions starting in January 1980.
As the economy stalled, the inflation rate leapt to a high of 14.6 percent. After the second recession, unemployment climbed to a peak of 10.8 percent.
But the Fed won its war: Inflation was dormant for the next two decades.
Even now, inflation —- at least the official measure of 4 percent —- seems modest enough to let the Fed keep rates low.
In the past two years, the Fed has cut the benchmark rate from 5.25 percent to 2 percent.
Any inflation-fighting would mean moving them upward again, which would likely slow the economy more.
At least some inflation may be coming from a "bubble" —- speculation that could pop if demand slackens.
"If oil is a bubble, and there's a good chance it is, then its bursting would lessen the inflationary threat a lot," said Doug Henwood, author of the book "Wall Street: How It Works and for Whom" and editor of the economics newsletter Left Business Observer.
Waiting for the scenario to play out, consumers and companies alike must do their best to plan, hoping to protect and nurture their assets.
"There are quite a few parallels to the '70s, and that is a concern," said Frank Butterfield, principal with Atlanta-based wealth managers Homrich & Berg. "The '70s were a bad time for financial assets. Stocks did poorly, bonds did poorly. That could happen again."
To navigate long term, Butterfield suggests diversifying portfolios, buying inflation-protected securities, using hedge funds and "rebalancing" investments as you go.
The economic trouble so far has been manageable, he said. "Things were worse in the '70s than they are now."
Most experts say the U.S. economy seems stronger than it was in the shaky '70s, more flexible and —- most important during an energy crisis —- more efficient.
The economy is about half as dependent on oil as it was at the time of the first oil shock in 1973, said Robert Whaples, chairman of the economics department at Wake Forest University.
"The '70s were a period of pretty slow productivity growth," he said. "There are important parallels between the two periods, but I don't think we will get double-digit unemployment or double-digit inflation rate."
Some things do return. The Eagles, after all, are playing summer concerts and promoting their latest album. But no amount of hindsight can truly tell the future.
As the Eagles themselves put it: "Who is gonna make it? We'll find out —- in the long run."
That was 1979.
GASOLINE
Now: Gas prices have doubled in a little more than three years. They are up a little more than one-third in the past year. Gas is costly but plentiful.
Then: Gas prices tripled during the decade, rising almost 50 percent from 1973 to 1975, and by 80 percent in 1979 and 1980. Shortages forced restrictions on sales.
PRESIDENTIAL APPROVAL
Now: 28 percent
Then: 29 percent
IRAN
Now: Tension between the United States and Iran over nuclear programs and U.S. involvement in Iraq has led to higher oil prices.
Then: Iranian Revolution in 1979 overthrew a U.S. ally, led to a long hostage crisis and sent oil prices skyrocketing.
UNEMPLOYMENT
Now: In the past year and a half, official unemployment has increased 25 percent. It remains historically modest: 5.5 percent.
Then: After the Arab oil embargo, unemployment rose by more than 80 percent.
INFLATION
Now: Consumer prices are up 4.1 percent in the past year, the government says, but critics say the data understates reality.
Then: Consumer costs were up an average of 8.12 percent a year through the decade, peaking at 13.3 percent in 1979.
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
Now: 2.58, average, 2000-07
Then: 1.73 percent, average 1971-80
Sources: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Energy Information Administration, Gallup Poll, PollingReport.com.
Tuesday, July 08, 2008 at 12:22 PM
Puddles
My son told me this... he is growing up way too fast.
Once upon a time:
Three little ducks go into a Bar....................
"Say, what's your name?" the bartender asked the first duck.
"Huey," was the reply.
"How's your day been, Huey?"
"Great. Lovely day. Had a ball. Been in and out of puddles all day. What else could a duck want?" said Huey.
"Oh. That's nice," said the bartender. He turned to the second duck, "Hi,
and what's your name?"
"Dewey," came the answer from duck number two.
"So how's your day been, Dewey?" he asked.
"Great. Lovely day. I've had a ball too. Been in and out of puddles all day myself. What else could a duck want?"
The bartender turned to the third duck and said, "So, you must be Louie?"
"No," she said, batting her eyelashes.
"I'm Puddles."
Monday, July 07, 2008 at 9:47 AM
Tom Petty - I Won't Back Down
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