September 7, 2007 archive

Quote for Discussion: Episode 2

Today’s quote for discussion is from Ralph Waldo Emerson’s Self-Reliance, which I read when I was in high school.  I was reminded of it by the brilliant hilzoy of Obsidian Wings in this extraordinary post.

We Interrupt this Blog

For some banner meta.

Straight from the Great Pony’s mouth….

1.  buhdy wants the stars and ponies back
2.  however, we have lost our permission to use the ponies – so we have to find different ones
3.  he does not like the font on the buddha banner – prefers an Asian brush stroke font
4.  suggested we put the buddha on the star background
5.  wants to have a banner contest – may the best win

so here we go…
this is his concept –

& I hereby recuse myself from the banner.  I’m going to put OPOL’s latest back up until we have something more definite to show.

pfiore8 sent some mockups too.  I will post them here if she doesn’t mind. 

Midnight Cowboying – How We do Shit In Texas

This is a special treat for a special someone.

This never happened, and I was never here.

Enjoyz.

LIVE… we’re going live on monday? eek!

here we are… ready? set? go live??? holy moly.

this is the palette of pre-natal docudharma
… the way your auras look to me

Not Funding The Iraq Debacle – Tell The Senate

Chris Dodd has set up a simple way to send the Senate your view on the proposed Dem capitulation. Matt Browner-Hamlin of the Dodd campaign (I am a Dodd supporter) writes:

Earlier this afternoon, my colleague Tim Tagaris sent an email to the campaign email list asking Dodd’s supporters to contact their Senators and ask them to join Senator Dodd in publicly rejecting any Iraq legislation that does not include enforceable deadlines for withdrawal of combat troops from Iraq. Instead, Tim asked that people lobby their Senators to support the Dodd amendment, the best option for immediately withdrawing American troops from Iraq and ensuring there is a firm deadline tied to funding for the redeployment of our troops out of Iraq.

. . . Already over 1,000 emails have been sent to the Senate in the first few of hours of this push, asking our Senators to vote “YES” on the Dodd amendment and “NO” on any legislation without hard deadlines.

Just say no to funding the Iraq Debacle.

Pony Party!

What?  Does this have to be about something?

Let ME just say one thing- to our visitors and lurkers

Just a quick note to those of you who have begun signing up. Feel free to write essays or to comment. The meta you see is intentionally being done in the open, and we welcome opinions. Some of this will be a work in progress. Those who are lurking, please go ahead and sign in.

As Buhdy says: be excellent to each other; and as I say: including to those with whom you have had previous disagreements (or just ignore them). We welcome you and look forward to hearing from you.

Leaders Melting, Bush Lost

Hat tip Sydney Indymedia

MakePovertyHistory Australia carted ice sculptures of George Bush and John Howard around Sydney to melt today to highlight their alternative vision for APEC: Building a Sustainable Future Free from Extreme Poverty: Priorities for APEC (40-page pdf)

Make Poverty History co-chair, Andrew Hewett, makes the connection:

It is a moral challenge, because those least responsible for causing the problem – the poorest people in the poorest countries of the world – will overwhelmingly pay the highest price as climate change begins to bite. If Australia is serious about being a global leader as chair of APEC, we must do three things. First, join the rest of the international community in ratifying the Kyoto Protocol. Second, commit to deep cuts in greenhouse pollution. And third, support the efforts of our neighbours and developing country partners in APEC to adapt to climate change and reduce poverty in an environmentally sustainable way.

It is clear that climate change is affecting the lives of the poorest people in our world. The monsoon season in our region and in South Asia has become shorter and more intense over the last decade, and so we can expect to see more people displaced by the kind of flooding we see right now in India, Pakistan, Nepal and Bangladesh. Crops are failing in the face of increasing temperatures and changing rainfall patterns. Millions of the poorest people in sub-Saharan Africa
face water shortages. And sea level rise could potentially displace millions of people from small island nations in the Pacific, and low-lying coastal countries, over the next few decades.

If we don’t get serious about tackling climate change, we won’t be talking about making poverty history, we’ll be making it permanent.

In other news from Sydney, surprise! W doesn’t even know where he is. In front of business leaders on Friday:

Thank you for being such a fine host for the OPEC summit . . . .

His recovery was lamer still, if that is possible.

As I type this, Radio Australia is playing Pink’s Dear Mr. President, something I have never heard them play before.

Elkhorn, Staghorn, and Foghorn Leghorn

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting
Not sure if there’s really a “Foghorn Leghorn” coral, but the other two appear to have just paved a path for the few remaining penguins and the polar bears.  The Christian Science Monitor reports: New tool to fight global warming: Endangered Species Act?  A recent deal to protect the habitat of endangered coral may offer US environmentalists new leverage.

The elkhorn and staghorn coral won protected status under the ESA in May 2006. But it took a second legal battle to win a preservation of the corals’ “critical habitat,” part of last week’s settlement between environmentalists and the US fisheries service.

The act’s leverage will grow, environmentalists say, as climate change becomes recognized as a factor in species’ decline. The number of species-recovery plans that cite global warming as a damaging factor has gone from zero as recently as 1990 to 141 today – with most of the growth since 2000.

While that’s still just 9 percent of the 1,494 species listed at one time or another, the increase suggests that a large group of species still awaiting listing will have global warming cited as a major cause in their decline. The polar bear, 12 species of penguins, and the Kittlitz’s Murrelet, an Alaskan bird that nests on the edges of glaciers, are all candidates, Mr. Suckling says.

Note: You may recall Mr. Suckling’s work from melvin’s writing recently about a mother of a lawsuit v. Interior ahead.  Rest up Mr. Suckling! 

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