Archive for February, 2008

Gazas Culture of Self-Destruction

Thursday, February 28th, 2008

Pajamas Media: Gazas Culture of Self-Destruction

Palestinians in Gaza harm themselves more than they could ever hurt Israel, argues Yael Kaynan. What future is there when children are taught that there is no greater accomplishment than blowing themselves up?

Hate begets hate begets hate.

The Echo Park Time Travel Mart

Thursday, February 28th, 2008

INTRODUCING THE ECHO PARK TIME TRAVEL MART
I could totally go for some canned mammoth chunks right now.

Internet idiocy

Saturday, February 23rd, 2008

Internet idiocy: the latest pandemic

To be ignorant has always been easy: Simply sit back in your recliner and watch Fox News.

But to be genuinely misinformed has become exponentially easier with the rise of the Internet, as lies and half-truths gush forth through its twisted web of data-tubes.

In the pre-Web age, publishing something which was patently false required a fair bit of money or, at the very least, access to some dumb schmuck who was willing to publish your ideas for you, and giving legitimacy to ill-conceived or outright moronic views required hours and hours of cherry-picking quotes and struggling to find sources that agreed with you.

Also, Oswald killed Kennedy and the moon landing was real.

CatGenie

Friday, February 22nd, 2008

CatGenie - The World’s Only Self-Flushing, Self Washing Cat BoxI’d be up for this if it didn’t cost so much. I swear if I don’t clean the litter box every 5 days or so the furry poop machines deliberately miss but to spite me.

Saudi Arabia goes old school

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

Saudi Arabia goes old school

Oh, Saudi Arabia. That magical land where women can’t drive and rape victims are punishable by lashing has decided to go old school in its latest example of misogyny: sentencing a women to execution … for witchcraft.

Yes, you heard that correctly. Thanks to a coerced confession and testimonies from neighbors who claim she “bewitched” them, a woman named Fawza Falih was sentenced to death in 2006. According to the Associated Press, she has tried to appeal this conviction, saying that she was forced to fingerprint a confession that she couldn’t even read (she’s illiterate).

What would Elizabeth Montgomery do?

You Are What You Spend

Monday, February 18th, 2008

You Are What You Spend - New York Times
WITH markets swinging widely, the Federal Reserve slashing interest rates and the word “recession” on everybody’s lips, renewed attention is being given to the gap between the haves and have-nots in America. Most of this debate, however, is focused on the wrong measurement of financial well-being.

It’s true that the share of national income going to the richest 20 percent of households rose from 43.6 percent in 1975 to 49.6 percent in 2006, the most recent year for which the Bureau of Labor Statistics has complete data. Meanwhile, families in the lowest fifth saw their piece of the pie fall from 4.3 percent to 3.3 percent.

Awesome!

Saturday, February 16th, 2008


Michael Bay’s AWESOME commercial!

ikea hacker

Friday, February 15th, 2008

ikea hackerSwedish for something-something.

What is the future of love?

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

For Valentine’s Day, this question: What is the future of love?Postglobal asks. I answer: robots.

In The Bag

Wednesday, February 13th, 2008


Is it too early to declare the one who will get the Democrat nomination?

Europe’s Philosophy of Failure

Wednesday, February 13th, 2008

Foreign Policy: Europe’s Philosophy of Failure

Millions of children are being raised on prejudice and disinformation. Educated in schools that teach a skewed ideology, they are exposed to a dogma that runs counter to core beliefs shared by many other Western countries. They study from textbooks filled with a doctrine of dissent, which they learn to recite as they prepare to attend many of the better universities in the world. Extracting these children from the jaws of bias could mean the difference between world prosperity and menacing global rifts. And doing so will not be easy. But not because these children are found in the madrasas of Pakistan or the state-controlled schools of Saudi Arabia. They are not. Rather, they live in two of the world’s great democracies—France and Germany.

What a country teaches its young people reflects its bedrock national beliefs. Schools hand down a society’s historical narrative to the next generation. There has been a great deal of debate over the ways in which this historical ideology is passed on—over Japanese textbooks that downplay the Nanjing Massacre, Palestinian textbooks that feature maps without Israel, and new Russian guidelines that require teachers to portray Stalinism more favorably. Yet there has been almost no analysis of how countries teach economics, even though the subject is equally crucial in shaping the collective identity that drives foreign and domestic policies.

Great article from Foreign Policy Magazine.

Playpumps

Tuesday, February 12th, 2008

Playpumps Water System
It’s not something sexual , you pervert! Rather it’s a clever idea to create a merry-go-round that pumps water as it spins.
Watch the video.

Science wins a Grammy

Monday, February 11th, 2008

Math Trek: The Grammy in Mathematics, Science News Online, Feb. 9, 2008

Shortly after September 11, 2001, a small, heavy package wrapped in brown paper arrived in the mail at the Woody Guthrie Archives in New York City. Inside was a mess of wires.

Guthrie’s daughter Nora eventually figured out that the suspicious package wasn’t a bomb, but rather a recording of her father on a device that predated magnetic tape. After a year of searching, she managed to track down someone with the equipment to play it.

Canada’s Most Sustainable Cities Ranking

Monday, February 11th, 2008

Corporate Knights :: Canada’s Most Sustainable Cities Ranking

Calgary came in last in the large city category. Boo! C’mon people!

The full article (PDF) is a good read.

Silly Rabbit

Monday, February 11th, 2008


Silly Rabbit! Jews are for kids.

sudo rm -rf /

Monday, February 11th, 2008


Makes your Linux or Mac OS X system run super fast. Actually no, don’t do it!

Maybe Next Time

Monday, February 11th, 2008

Now I’m kind of curious if Edmonton had a good turnout for their Anonymous vs. Scientology thing. Had I been there I would watched on the sidelines.

The are few things worse than Scientology but these protesters are certainly up there. If you’re using a shitty Hollywood adaptation of a good comic book as your inspiration to protest then you make the Scientologists look good.

Yes, I know about Lisa McPherson. Yes, I know about Xenu and OT III and the whole bit. I say let the Scientologists be douchebags in peace. Besides, Tom Cruise is doing more to make them less credible than any Guy Fawkes mask wearing dummy can ever do.

Quiet Down!

Sunday, February 10th, 2008


How to make a baby stop crying: the non-violent method.

In The (Red)

Thursday, February 7th, 2008

Bottom Line for (Red) - New York Times

In its March 2007 issue, Advertising Age magazine reported that Red companies had collectively spent as much as $100 million in advertising and raised only $18 million. Officials of the campaign said then that the companies had spent $50 million on advertising and that the amount raised was $25 million. Advertising Age stood by its article.

But the iPods were cool.

Auto-Tune

Wednesday, February 6th, 2008

Auto-Tune Abuse in Pop Music - 10 Examples - Hometracked

If you’re unfamiliar with Auto-tune, and especially if you listen to much pop and rock, you might not hear it initially. When overdone, the effect yields an unnatural yodel or warble in a singer’s voice. But the sound is so commonplace in modern mainstream music that your ears may have tuned out the auto-tune!