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Dallas Office Shooting Gets Very Personal 20100309

by: Translator

Tue Mar 09, 2010 at 19:02:29 PST

Hello, all.  This is sort of an irregular blog for me.  Except about myself, I rarely talk about other family members to protect their privacy.  However, this has been on national news, so their privacy is not very protected already.

Everyone is familiar with violence, at least on the news.  This piece affects me personally, and even though I watched some of the news feed in real time, it was after the medics had already left with the victims.

There's More... :: (30 Comments, 1007 words in story)  

Pique the Geek 20100307: How Canning Food Works

by: Translator

Sun Mar 07, 2010 at 18:11:31 PST

(10PM EST - promoted by Nightprowlkitty)

Hello, all.  I did not have research time to finish up the next installment about nuclear fusion in stars, so we will have to do with this.  I began planting my garden last week, so the subject of canning food came to mind.

Most people do not realize that canned foods are relatively recent developments, not counting wine and beer, which are at least technically, canned in many cases.

There's More... :: (13 Comments, 967 words in story)  

Forced Sterilizations of Indigenous Women (Update)

by: winter rabbit

Tue Mar 02, 2010 at 14:21:58 PST

( - promoted by buhdydharma )

The sterilizations of indigenous women were covert means of the continuation of the extermination policy against the Indian Nations. At least three indigenous generations from 3,406 women are not in existence now as the result. The sterilizations were not unintentional or negligible. They were genocide. What would the indigenous culture and political landscape be now? One can only imagine, but the sterilizations like the relocations - were forced.

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Pique the Geek 20100228: Energy from Fusion. Overview

by: Translator

Sun Feb 28, 2010 at 18:55:38 PST

( - promoted by buhdydharma )

Nuclear fusion is often proffered as the final solution to our energy needs.  That well may be, but hardly anyone understands what it means, and almost no one, outside of physicists, knows how it relates to nuclear fission (the power source that we use now).

It all has to do with Dr. Einstein's simple, but seminal equation, E = mc2.  This means that mass can be converted to energy in a huge fashion.  Let us take a kilogram of mass, any mass, and convert it to energy.  Using the formula, and it has been proved over and over to be correct, one kilogram of mass (think of a big sirloin steak, for example) becomes a LOT of energy.

According to the equation, that kilogram of mass becomes thus:

E = (1 kg)(2.9979 x 108 m/s)2  = 8.99 x 1016 Joules

This is almost 90,000 billions of Joules.  We are talking big energy.  But it does happen quite like this.  Only in matter-antimatter annihilation does all mass become energy.

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The Bronx Invasion of Brazil. On Friday We Take Cuba!

by: Eddie C

Mon Feb 22, 2010 at 19:33:22 PST

Cross Posted at Daily Kos, Firefly-Dreaming, La Vita Locavore and Progressive Blue.

No more snow job photo diaries out of me. Since it is midwinter and everyone can use a little break from the cold, I think a little Brazilian Modern is in order.

How about you? Join me below for more photos and see an amateur review of my South American trip from last year.

There's More... :: (5 Comments, 1804 words in story)  

EcoJustice: About Darfur, Part 1.

by: rb137

Mon Feb 22, 2010 at 18:07:27 PST

(10 am. - promoted by ek hornbeck)

KuangSi2

There is a years long grisly struggle between ethnic groups in Darfur -- with one government-backed militia brutalizing civilians with ethnic connections to the guerrilla rebels they fight. There is a refugee crisis, starvation, drought, and horrible violence.

The conflict in Darfur is complicated. It has several causes, and the people who fight sometimes do so for different reasons. Sudan is riddled with deep ethnic divides, fueled by the colonialism that favored one ethnic group over others. There is political posturing and finger pointing in Khartoum that might occupy a handful of doctoral theses on the subject before we understand it all. But at least two of the reasons this conflict persists are rooted in ecojustice: desertification and oil. And that oil doesn't even lie under Darfur.

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New Title: Ft. Tryon Park in Snow with Tourist Update.

by: Eddie C

Fri Feb 19, 2010 at 20:45:43 PST

Cross-posted at Daily Kos.

Welcome to a new but old series that is all about photography. Do you have any photos or information about photography to share?

Yesterday's diary was about snow pictures on a perfect blue sky day in Van Cortlandt Park. Tonight's represents something a bit more challenging, trying to capture the snow as it is falling.

It's not so easy and I really should have worn a hat and some gloves.

So if your in the mood for another snowy park, than take a walk below the fold for a park in a blizzard.  

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I misjudged Limbaugh 20102019

by: Translator

Thu Feb 18, 2010 at 21:15:00 PST

I have never been a stranger to admitting when I have been wrong.  My philosophy is that is better to be wrong than to have no opinion.  Since I write many of my thoughts here and at Kos, I am never short for feedback to show me how I am wrong, and I actually appreciate it.  I always strive for accuracy, and welcome any corrections.

I have been very wrong about Limbaugh.  I started listen to him around 1993 (please do not ask why, because the answer is extremely convoluted and very personal, [thanks, Cruz]) so we will not go there.  Please follow my thoughts.

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Adverts: Love, Hate, or Indifferent 20090216

by: Translator

Tue Feb 16, 2010 at 18:28:26 PST

There seem to be more adverts on the TeeVee than content.  I guess that is why it only costs from $20 to $50 a month for "free" TeeVee.

Some adverts are amusing, some are less than amusing, and some are just insulting.  Please keep with me as I look at a few that I find in each category.

There's More... :: (3 Comments, 622 words in story)  

Training Tuesday: Part 2 of Organizational Change and the Adoption of Online Tools

by: SumofChange

Tue Feb 16, 2010 at 09:23:34 PST

originally posted by Will Urquhart at Sum of Change

Last week, we introduced Kenyon Farrow of Queers for Economic Justice, Calvin Williams of the Generational Alliance, and Althea Erickson of the Freelancers Union. They shared with us a brief summary of how their organizations had adopted some online tools.

This week, they delve into some of the challenges they faced along the way, and some insight into how they overcame them:

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How the universe began...almost.

by: rb137

Mon Feb 15, 2010 at 15:47:15 PST

(11 am. - promoted by ek hornbeck)

KuangSi2Some say that in the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth. But what do we know about our early universe and how we got here? How do we know that our ideas about the early universe are right? What is dark matter and dark energy and why do we think it exists in the first place?

All of the matter in the universe expanded from a single point. It doesn't matter much what that means, though. To beg the question is to ask what happened before time began. And because of events that happened during the the inflationary epoch, we can no longer see all of the details of how the universe looked at the beginning of time.

But we won't ask those questions today. Here we will talk about the current state of cosmology given by The Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe -- the reigning Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation [CMBR] experiment that gives us our best data from the early universe. Within a year, though, we expect a new and improved data set from The Planck Satellite.

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Cheney: This is Waterboarding

by: rb137

Sun Feb 14, 2010 at 18:33:37 PST

(9 am. - promoted by ek hornbeck)

Cheney is on a lying tour about torture again.


Mr. Cheney said interrogators should have had the option to use the "enhanced interrogation techniques" his administration approved-including the use of simulated drowning, or "water-boarding." He called himself "a big supporter of water-boarding," which critics say amounts to torture.

"Now, President Obama has taken [those techniques] off the table," Mr. Cheney said. "He announced when he came in last year that they would never use anything other than the U.S. Army Manual which doesn't include those techniques. I think that's a mistake."

Enhanced interrogation techniques aren't torture -- the Bush Administration approved them, right???

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Pique the Geek 20100214: The "Common" Cold

by: Translator

Sun Feb 14, 2010 at 17:57:06 PST

Well, I am back now.  I had planned to provide an installment last week, but I had a bad cold and just did not feel much like setting at the keyboard.

Personally, I do not mind the coughing nor the sneezing, or even the sore throat.  The one thing that bothers me the worst is to lose my ability to thermocompensate, such that I feel either cold or hot when I should be in my comfort zone of temperature.  Aspirin assists me to regulate a bit better, but being well is the better feeling.

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The Problem with Education 20100208

by: Translator

Mon Feb 08, 2010 at 20:00:44 PST

I guess that I am one of those "elite eggheads" that Rush Limbaugh (college flunkout and several times divorced, in addition to being a self proclaimed drug addict), Sean Hannity (college dropout), Glenn Beck (college dropout and divorced, and a self proclaimed alcoholic), Bill O'Reilly (who has a BA and and MA and a settled case of sexual harassment), Greta van Susteren (with a law degree from Gerogetown, and returned to teach law there), and the mighty eye candy Gretchen Carlson, the Miss America whose nanny was not any other than the bizarre Michele Bachmann, now in Congress from the diverse state of Minnesota. By the way, Carlson has a degree in the liberal (socialist) field of Sociology.

So the radical right goes from the ignorant to the well educated.  I guess that I do not fit in well.

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The Spoils of Oil in the Sudan

by: rb137

Wed Feb 03, 2010 at 18:53:17 PST

(10 am. - promoted by ek hornbeck)

KuangSi2We see images of Darfur on our computer screens, with people like Angelina Jolie, George Clooney, and Don Cheadle raising awareness about the mounting humanitarian crisis in that region of the Sudan and Chad. But to make the story clear, they tend to speak of Darfur as an isolated conflict inside Sudan; the greater context of the crisis does not change the dire need for aid and intervention.

But the reasons behind the conflict in Darfur are complicated, and they cannot be separated from Sudanese civil war history. The conflict in Darfur started as an uprising against the Sudanese government by the Fur and other farmers in the region because they were marginalized and excluded from the peace negotiations toward ending the Second Sudanese Civil War...

There's More... :: (8 Comments, 692 words in story)  

Tests: Garrison's "A Measure Of Failure"

by: cassiodorus

Tue Feb 02, 2010 at 11:41:08 PST

(6:30PM EST - promoted by Nightprowlkitty)

Book review: Garrison, Mark J.  A Measure of Failure: The Political Origins of Standardized Testing.  Albany NY: SUNY Press, 2009. 140 pages.

Essentially Garrison's book critiques standardized testing in the public schools as a power trip -- what type of power trip a particular test is for, Garrison argues, depends upon the standards which are erected and the purposes to which the final scores on the tests are used.  It is argued, then, that standardized tests have had different purposes in different historical periods.  The high-stakes testing regime of the No Child Left Behind Act (of the Bush administration) is argued to be destructive (in this regard) of public schooling in general.

(Crossposted at Orange)

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Training Tuesday: The Numbers You Need To Win Your Election - Part 2

by: SumofChange

Tue Feb 02, 2010 at 08:53:28 PST

originally posted by Mitch Malasky at Sum of Change

This week, we are going to follow up on last week's post on the numbers you need to win your election.  This week, we're looking at special circumstances and unique elections and how that may or may not effect how you set your numbers.

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Cutting Costs 20100201

by: Translator

Mon Feb 01, 2010 at 19:24:50 PST

Things get expensive from time to time.  Right now, with the cold weather, heat is expensive.  At other times, being cool is expensive.

Please follow me over the fold to talk about cutting expenses starting now.  Most of them will not affect your comfort, but one the most important one just might.

There's More... :: (12 Comments, 480 words in story)  

Land and Liberty

by: gjohnsit

Sat Jan 30, 2010 at 19:24:27 PST

(noon. - promoted by ek hornbeck)

  On January 29, 1911, a small band of 18 revolutionaries marched into Mexicali and seized the town, practically without firing a shot. Thus began one of the most unusual and controversial episodes in Mexican history.
 These revolutionaries were not the typical warlords that Mexico was used to seeing. These revolutionaries had American volunteers, but not the sort of filibusters that Baja California was already very familiar with. In fact, this revolutionary movement had little in common with anything Mexico had experienced before or since.

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

 These revolutionaries weren't interested in just overthrowing the corrupt and repressive government, they wanted to overthrow society as well.

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Historic firsts in labor history

by: gjohnsit

Mon Jan 25, 2010 at 12:32:50 PST

( - promoted by buhdydharma )

  As a people we like to mark the anniversaries of important events in our lives. This is true for nations, individuals, corporations, and political groups.
 The labor movement has been mostly left out of this tradition. This is my effort to change that. For instance, this Wednesday is the 160th Birthday of Samuel Gompers, founder of the AFL.

For this essay I would like to concentrate of events, such as this Tuesday is the anniversary of the very first worker's compensation agreement.

There's More... :: (4 Comments, 1675 words in story)  

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March on Washington
Saturday, March 20
 

 

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