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Archive for February, 2008

Subsidies Run Out of Gas

clipped from news.yahoo.com

The bill would roll back two lucrative tax breaks for the five largest U.S. oil companies. One helps manufacturers compete against foreign companies; the other gives American companies a tax credit related to oil and gas extraction outside the country. Democrats estimated that those current breaks would save the oil companies $17.65 billion in taxes over the next 10 years.

  blog it
So the oil companies are losing a couple of their tax breaks. In one way I’m happy that some are finally realizing how stupid subsidies are. On the other hand, it’s funny to see the flawed logic involved.

Everyone is out to lynch the energy companies as evil, greedy, no-good profiteers. But a simple analysis at:

http://www.taxfoundation.org/news/show/1139.html

… shows us that the fattest in the land is not the giant corporation… it’s the government.
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  • clipped from www.newsnetnebraska.org

    ?An Omaha woman was surprised to find nude photos of herself on the Internet in December 2006. At the time, she was only 16-years-old.

    ????Her mother, Twila Bloomingdale, was officially charged with manufacturing child pornography and child abuse last Thursday.

    ????The 49-year-old allegedly pasted head shots of her daughter onto a nude woman’s body and posted them in sexually explicit positions on a Web site.

      blog it
    Ok, I’m confused here. So saying I go out on the Internet and grab some nudie pics, go to another website, cut a baby’s head from a pic, slap it over the head of the port starlet, it is manufacturing child porn?

    Don’t get me wrong. It is entirely distasteful of the mother to do such a thing. However, I don’t believe the manufacturing clause literally meant manufacturing in the cut-and-paste sense of the word.

    The only place I can see this case having teeth is in the civil courts.
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  • Clinton & Gore, Sitting in Tree

    clipped from ap.google.com

    Clinton praised Corning for moving into new product lines like fiber optics. “They used to make glass,” she said. “If they were still about glass they wouldn’t be around.”

    clipped from en.wikipedia.org
    This attenuation level was first achieved in 1970, by researchers Robert D. Maurer, Donald Keck, Peter C. Schultz, and Frank Zimar working for American glass maker Corning Glass Works, now Corning Inc. They demonstrated a fiber with 17 dB optic attenuation per kilometer by doping silica glass with titanium.
      blog it
    Yes. We’re very happy that Corning moved into new product lines… ~40 (or more) years ago. If only the Harlem Globetrotters had ventured into something other than cartoons…
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  • clipped from www.latimes.com

    “Significant questions have been raised about Mr. Clemens’ truthfulness,” said Rep. Henry Waxman (D- Beverly Hills), the committee chairman, and Rep. Tom Davis (R-Virginia), the ranking Republican, in a letter to Atty. Gen. Michael Mukasey. The letter cites contradictions in Clemens’ sworn testimony and alleges he “may have intentionally misled” the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee by denying he ever used steroids or human growth hormone.
      blog it
    are Congressional oaths sworn? If so, shouldn’t the whole of Congress be sitting before the Justice Department? It doesn’t really matter, the JD is only after porn and pain patients.
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  • From TPM Cafe via Reason

    clipped from www.reason.com
    a mysterious “service interruption” blocked the broadcast of only the Siegelman segment of 60 Minutes this evening. The broadcaster is Channel 19 WHNT, which serves Northern Alabama and Southern Tennessee. This station was noteworthy for its hostility to Siegelman and support for his Republican adversary. The station ran a trailer stating “We apologize that you missed the first segment of 60 Minutes tonight featuring ‘The Prosecution of Don Siegelman.’ It was a technical problem with CBS out of New York.”
    clipped from tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com

    Ever since June of last year, the Siegelman case has, more than any other, been the prime example of selective prosecution in the Bush Justice Department, culminating in a House Judiciary Committee hearing last October. Siegelman, a popular Dem governor when prosecutors set their sights on him, is currently serving out his sentence for bribery charges.

      blog it
    Why did Outkast and other rappers refer to their region as the dirty south? Because the [edited] is deep enough to bury white collars with the no collars.

    Reason has an interesting tidbit with a link to the TPM Muckraker which has insight and video of the 60 minutes episode covering Don Siegelman.

    Siegelman was the governor of Alabama who came under heavy suspicion of bribery due, in part, to testimony given by a former aide. The former aide was no angel himself and was fighting a stint in the big house on unrelated charges. According to the 60 Minutes episode, the generally Republican-heavy justice department was driven at the behest of Carl Rove to lynch Siegelman any way possible.

    To get a confession, the aide was reportedly forced to go over his statement repeatedly until he <i>got it right</i>. However, as a key part of discovery, the defense team should have had access to all of the notes and information gleaned during the recording of his statement. They got nothing.

    It doesn’t help that the news station cited in the clip cut out the broadcast. They appear to be justice department approved, card carrying republicans. There has been a miscarriage of justice albeit one that happens many times, every day, in the courts of this nation.
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  • If there is one thing I hate about watching TV, it’s watching TV on the Internet. No bones about it, most major media outlets continue to get wrong what they can’t get right over the airwaves.

    Commercials: bathroom breaks for some, pet peeve and bane to others. So why do larger media outlets think that their vision of video on the Internet is no different than that on the airwaves? This type of thinking will only lead to overall failure; failure to gain and retain viewers; failure to get marketshare; failure to provide anyone with any service that is worth spending time watching.

    On the top of my pet peeve list is  those video sites that use Windows Media. Of course, I’m a Mac and Linux user so I can have some gripes with it. However To view video on the Mac, I need to download flip4mac which has its own “quirks” to say the least.

    But back to advertising. I’ve gone to watch videos where the first 15 to 30 seconds of the video is an advertisement. Thanks for wasting my time and making me watch another dumb Microsoft commercial trying to sell me on the wonders of Word. A 30 second advertisement and a 2-3 minute video is a worse experience than watching live TV. Way to go… Way to leverage all the wonderful power that technology has given us by making the entire experience worse than what it was. Hopefully the post office won’t go back to using horse-drawn mail delivery.

    Mass media execs have entirely missed the Internet boat. It sailed by them a long time ago. Is it really any wonder why people will spend a few hours watching videos on YouTube? Is it, aside from the dork factor of watching other people do stupid things, because the content is short, to the point, and generally entertaining without being draining?

    I often wonder how many marketing execs would take a radio script and put the entire script up as print ad in a magazine or newspaper. It would generally be boring to see nothing but huge blocks of text and they would be mostly ignored. Good advertising is alluring within the media format it is designed for. Internet TV is not the same as “regular” TV (and I include cable), but that has not stopped marketing execs from applying one script to a different medium.

    While I’m hardly one to pick on the business world and corporations, but for the bucks many of these institutions are paying for highly trained MBAs and/or consultants, very few of them have the wherewithal to think outside of the rectangular box (with a power cord).

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    clipped from www.innocenceproject.org
    In the wake of the Feb. 15 hearings that cleared two Innocence Project clients after a combined three decades in prison for crimes they didn’t commit, more allegations of misconduct have been raised against medical examiner Steven Hayne and forensic dentist Michael West. An attorney for a New York woman charged with manslaughter in the death of her daughter has asked for a state review of Hayne’s finding that the victim was suffocated. But since Mississippi has lacked a state medical examiner since the mid-1990s, there is not an official avenue to review Hayne’s findings. The Innocence Project sent a letter Feb. 14 to the commissioner of the Mississippi Dept. of Public Safety, asking him to appoint a State Medical Examiner immediately.
      blog it
    I’ve followed Radley Balko’s coverage of the Mississippi medical examiner, who has been offering questionable testimony and forensic evidence for years, ever since Radley brought the issue to our [readers] attention.

    Not only has Haynes’ credentials been brought into focus, but his clinical abilities as well. The good doctor readily admits to doing more autopsies a year than is recommended by the standard pathology certification board. In fact, Hayne’s admits to doing ~6-~7 times the number all while claiming he is “board certified”.

    Radley’s research has pointed out that his “board certification” is questionable at best. What most forensic pathologists would consider “board certification” is not the same certification Dr. Haynes holds.

    One would expect the media to be clamoring over this with the recent release of two inmates who were convicted partly on the testimony of Haynes. One serving a life sentence while the other sat on death row, both inmates were recently exonerated after a confession was received from a third party. Collectively, both inmates lost 30 years of time for crimes they did not commit.

    I would suggest you take the time to read through the back story at http://www.theAgitator.com for more information. While Radley’s discussions on his blog are driven from personal opinion, the research underlying his position is well covered and documented and deserved.
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  • clipped from news.yahoo.com


    “The (migration) act is unlike any other act I’ve seen in terms of the power given to the minister to make decisions about individual cases.


    “I am uncomfortable with that, not just because of concern about playing God, but also because of the lack of transparency and accountability for those decisions.”

      blog it
    I’m scratching my head over this one - although it occasionally does happen. Politician complains of having too much power.
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  • A New Annoyance of an Old Type

    clipped from www.funnyhub.com
      blog it
    Back in the day, Real Networks RealPlayer was was the icon of slowness on dial-up. Connections would suddenly drop and all you get is the ‘Buffering’ message.

    I’ve started to come to hate having video posted in blogs any more. YouTube is a prime example of this problem. How many times do you go to a site, see a video in a blog post, click play only to find out: “Sorry, this video is no longer available”. The oddity is that while we’ve progressed from our constant state of buffered grumpiness, we still cant keep the entire video over IP thing fluid and functional. We’re no longer waiting on content, we just can’t manage to keep it online long enough.
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  • clipped from www.nytimes.com
    With a little help from family, Mr. Thomas, who’s been working as a teacher in a Manhattan private school, had saved just enough to buy it outright: $14,000 cash. His monthly maintenance is a whopping $295.
      blog it
    I must say that Susan Dominus, the author of the piece has a great way with words herself. However she generally skips over the more significant part - it was subsidized. Now maybe Mr. Thomas only paid $14,000 for that property, but someone else footed the rest of the bill.

    How nice for Mr. Thomas, although I dare say he’d be less inclined to be so happy if we called it what it is: welfare.
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