Sunday, May 31, 2009

snopes

Have you ever received an email stating something like this.The government states in a secret document that the sky is falling, or that Russia is building a monster bomb. Perhaps the email might state that an anonymous government official states that he has proof that aliens have landed and walk among us. We all have received emails of this variety. I received one today telling me that I must take action right away to stop the government from passing senate bill sb2099. The writer stated that this bill would make registration of all fire arms mandatory in 2009 and that there would be a $50 tax on each one. This all sounded pretty official. Fortunately I know of a web site that debunks a lot of this crap. The site is titled snopes.com. I went to this site and typed sb2099 in search and was given the truth which basically said that this bill was introduced in 2000 and more or less fell flat on it's face. I have found that this site will give you the real scoop and that if they don't know the real scoop they will tell you so. Check it out. Type snopes.com and take a look for yourself.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Oral Cancer. My personal Journey

I had a check up with the ENT doctor today. He pronounced everything okay after numbing my throat and running a scope down there and looking around while I gagged. It was a giant relief. I have said many times that I truly try to live my life one day at a time and I do try to do that. However cancer is truly a life threatening condition that I know can reoccur at any time. Every time that I feel a little discomfort anywhere in my body I wonder, could this be serious?
My throat has been plugged lately with thick drainage caused by allergies. This has caused me a little soreness as well as congestion. I was concerned enough that I took a Xanax last night about an hour before going to bed because I felt that I would lay awake worrying about the exam today. This disease has humbled me. I am very, very thankful and grateful that I am alive and feel as good as I do. I do know who to thank for this also. I felt like skipping and singing when I left the doc's office today. Today is a good day. Need I say more?

Saturday, May 09, 2009

From The Onion

WASHINGTON—After nearly four months of frank, honest, and open dialogue about the failing economy, a weary U.S. populace announced this week that it is once again ready to be lied to about the current state of the financial system.
Tired of hearing the grim truth about their economic future, Americans demanded that the bald-faced lies resume immediately, particularly whenever politicians feel the need to divulge another terrifying problem with Wall Street, the housing market, or any one of a hundred other ticking time bombs everyone was better off not knowing about.
In addition, citizens are requesting that the phrase, "It will only get worse before it gets better," be permanently replaced with, "Things are going great. Enjoy yourselves."
"I thought I wanted a new era of transparency and accountability, but honestly, I just can't handle it," Ohio resident Nathan Pletcher said. "All I ever hear about now is how my retirement has been pushed back 15 years and how I won't be able to afford my daughter's tuition when she grows up."
"From now on, just tell me the bullshit I want to hear," Pletcher added. "Tell me my savings are okay, everybody has a job, and we're No. 1 again. Please, just lie to my face."
The national call for decreased candor began last month, after the Department of Labor released another soul-crushing report that most Americans agreed "wasn't helping anything" and "didn't need to be so specific, at least."
The report estimated that 663,000 private and public sector jobs were lost in the month of March—a revealing statistic many people found shockingly blunt. Responding to the new information, an overwhelming majority of citizens said they believe that, during these extremely uncertain times, our leaders have a responsibility to come together, sit the American people down, and lie through their teeth about everything from misappropriations of taxpayer dollars to the severity of the credit crisis.
"I don't need to be constantly reminded that the lack of regulations on Wall Street compounded with failing institutions like AIG basically plunged the world economy into a global recession," said 32-year-old office manager Alexis Harrington. "What I want is for someone to tell me with a straight face that the GDP is through the roof so that I can feel better and instantly forget what all these terms even mean."
"For the first time in my life I know who the secretary of the treasury is," Harrington continued. "And I don't like it."
Reluctantly informed citizens like Harrington have also asked that CEOs of the nation's five largest banks release a joint statement saying that the October bailout worked perfectly, normal lending has resumed, and that we're nowhere close to having the entire monetary system collapse upon itself like a house of cards.
According to a CBS News/New York Times poll, 98 percent of Americans no longer appreciate President Barack Obama's attempts to break down the economic crisis into simple terms they can understand. Instead, many say the president should have the decency to insult their intelligence by using complex jargon to confuse and deceive them, perhaps even implying that the subprime mortgage fallout was just a big misunderstanding that resulted from a clerical error.
"I know when he's telling the truth, and it bothers me," recently laid-off schoolteacher Mary Hanover said of Obama. "He gets this serious expression on his face and says things like, 'This is the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.' Who needs to hear that? For Christ's sake, smile a bit and say we just found a diamond mine under Montana that's going to pay for everything. I'll believe you."
"Please, treat me like a child. Treat me like a five-year-old," Sacramento resident David Cooke, 64, wrote in a letter to Congress. "I lost everything when the Dow tanked, and I'm too old to start working again, so why punish me further by explaining in detail the clever ways these investment firms ripped me off and how they're all going to get away with it?"
Thus far, many policymakers in Washington have responded favorably to their constituents' requests, saying they respect and understand the public's need for dishonesty.
"I think we can accommodate the American people on this," Senate majority leader Harry Reid (D-NV) told reporters. "Why, just today we made excellent progress with GM, whose CEO Fritz Henderson told us that every penny of federal and taxpayer funds would go directly to the construction of three new auto plants in Detroit that will create over 90,000 new jobs and spark the economic rebound we've been waiting for."

Sunday, May 03, 2009

good news

John McCain believes we have to fight climate change, but not with Obama's cap and trade. Senate Minority Leader John Boehner thinks the idea that carbon dioxide is causing global warming is "comical". Sarah Palin, who once said that climate change isn't caused by man, now believes it's hurting Alaska and wants to drill for natural gas. RNC leader Michael Steele is a flat out climate change denier.
The biggest climate and energy bill ever to hit Congress is now taking center stage--and the GOP seems entirely unsure of how best to address global warming.

Politico puts it best: "Ask 15 Republicans about climate change, and you’ll get 20 different answers."
And that's not meant to be an insult to the GOP—there are indeed green Republicans working towards climate change solutions. But as Politico notes, the lack of party consensus on the issue could muddle proceedings and undermine the GOP's most potent line of attack: that a cap and trade or a carbon tax system would end up costing the American public too much money (a claim, by the way, that's exaggerated).
Which is good news for all those hoping that Congress can pass a bill that would curb carbon emissions. Of course, the best news would be for more Republicans to join forces with the likes of Sue Collins, the Maine Senator who's an outspoken advocate of climate legislation, and work towards a bipartisan bill to reduce greenhouse gases. But as it stands, the GOP party leadership is sending extremely mixed messages about what climate change even is--much less rallying for a unified course of action.
The GOP hasn't yet come up with an alternative to the Democrat's climate and energy bill—which one GOP Congressman called "the Largest Assault on Democracy and Freedom in this Country"--and they've produced no energy plan at all. It could be due to internal disagreement on the issue, or it could be that the Republican leadership deems addressing climate change unnecessary.
Either way, the "scattershot" confusion over the party's message on climate change is calling attention away from their argument that it would raise taxes and consumer costs—and drawing it to the fact that the GOP is undecided at best on how it plans on dealing with global warming. Which means less people will have an opportunity to buy into their "raised costs" line of attack. Which means a better shot at getting climate legislation passed to reduce greenhouse gases nationwide. Which means good news for Earth. John McCain believes we have to fight climate change, but not with Obama's cap and trade. Senate Minority Leader John Boehner thinks the idea that carbon dioxide is causing global warming is "comical". Sarah Palin, who once said that climate change isn't caused by man, now believes it's hurting Alaska and wants to drill for natural gas. RNC leader Michael Steele is a flat out climate change denier.
The biggest climate and energy bill ever to hit Congress is now taking center stage--and the GOP seems entirely unsure of how best to address global warming.

Politico puts it best: "Ask 15 Republicans about climate change, and you’ll get 20 different answers."
And that's not meant to be an insult to the GOP—there are indeed green Republicans working towards climate change solutions. But as Politico notes, the lack of party consensus on the issue could muddle proceedings and undermine the GOP's most potent line of attack: that a cap and trade or a carbon tax system would end up costing the American public too much money (a claim, by the way, that's exaggerated).
Which is good news for all those hoping that Congress can pass a bill that would curb carbon emissions. Of course, the best news would be for more Republicans to join forces with the likes of Sue Collins, the Maine Senator who's an outspoken advocate of climate legislation, and work towards a bipartisan bill to reduce greenhouse gases. But as it stands, the GOP party leadership is sending extremely mixed messages about what climate change even is--much less rallying for a unified course of action.
The GOP hasn't yet come up with an alternative to the Democrat's climate and energy bill—which one GOP Congressman called "the Largest Assault on Democracy and Freedom in this Country"--and they've produced no energy plan at all. It could be due to internal disagreement on the issue, or it could be that the Republican leadership deems addressing climate change unnecessary.
Either way, the "scattershot" confusion over the party's message on climate change is calling attention away from their argument that it would raise taxes and consumer costs—and drawing it to the fact that the GOP is undecided at best on how it plans on dealing with global warming. Which means less people will have an opportunity to buy into their "raised costs" line of attack. Which means a better shot at getting climate legislation passed to reduce greenhouse gases nationwide. Which means good news for Earth.

Saturday, May 02, 2009

good news

Israel develops solarpower 100x cheaper NETANYA, Israel — Scientists at the University of Tel Aviv in Israel have found a way to construct efficient photovoltaic cells costing at least a hundred times less than conventional silicon based devices, and with similar or better energy conversion efficiency. The reactive element in the researchers' patent pending device is genetically engineered proteins using photosynthesis for production of electrical energy.

Friday, May 01, 2009

good news

OUR PICKS
Pink Leads Mass Karaoke in London
Leopard Cubs Pounce on World Stage
'Lucky' Pilot Talks of Emergency Landing
Robin Family Nests Outside White House

Golfer Shoots One-Armed Hole-in-One
A hole-in-one is a true rarity in the game of golf. So, such a feat by a legally-blind man, playing with just one arm due to a disability, must defy all odds.
Alan Perrin served in the British Royal Marines until 1992 when he was injured in a bomb explosion during training exercises. The blast left him with a disabled right arm, blind in his left eye and with compromised vision in the other, the Daily Mirror reported.
Despite those physical limitations, the former soldier turned to golf.
Playing at his local club in Devon, England recently, the 45-year-old made a one-handed drive towards a tee 160 yards away. The shot was perfect, though Perrin and his golfing partner didn't know it at first. They thought the ball was lost.
"We spent five minutes looking [for the ball] but didn't want to hold up the next group so we moved on," Scotsman.com reported Perrin saying.
"When the group behind us reached the green they found a ball in the hole and shouted up, 'Anyone lost a yellow ball?'" he recalled. "It was mine. I asked where they found it — and it was in the hole."
An amateur golfer with a handicap of 28, Perrin said, "I was stunned. I was a hole-in-one virgin up to then. I took up golf some time after my accident and have only ever played with one arm."