Friday, November 19, 2010

Midnight At The Oasis: Roger Ebert's Journal


Roger Ebert's Journal



Everywhere I go, as much as I can, I listen to National Public Radio. It's an oasis of clear-headed intelligence. Carefully, patiently, it presents programming designed to make me feel just a little better equipped to reenter the world of uproar. I've written before about the disintegration of journalism, of the lowered standards everywhere in today's media. As a nation we once said, give us the facts and we'll make up our own minds. Now we say, spare us the facts and make up our minds for us. We have grown impatient, and the national attention span shrinks until even a 10-minute video on YouTube can seem unendurable. Nuggets of celeb gossip distract us on our way to oblivion. Studies document the way the internet is fragmenting our minds.

I'm part of this. I'm a promiscuous Tweeter. I don't read as many books as I once did. It is probably good for me that I see six or ten movies a week, none of them vulnerable to fast-forwarding or channel surfing. You just have to sit there are watch the suckers. My latest Great Movie, Kurosawa's masterful "Red Beard," was more than three hours long and I felt cleansed of clutter afterwards.

NPR brings fresh air into my mind, and not just with Terry Gross's show. The hosts seem calm and civilized. Their questions are good ones. You never catch them being clever for the sake of being clever. It's not happy talk. It's in good taste. NPR obviously makes a lot of effort to bring in guests that are appropriate to the subject; a lot of pre-production goes on. There's no catering to prejudice. No agenda.

There are radio essays from around the world. Local sounds and voices, sometimes with a translation. Tastes of Africa or Asia. Foods and rituals, emergencies and heartbreak, music and whimsy. A taste of BBC news. Some programming from Canada. Hour after hour, day after day, its standard of quality is daunting.

I've mentioned before that I cannot get into a taxi in Chicago where NPR is not either playing, or pre-tuned when the radio is turned on. The driver is invariably African or South Asian. I ask, "You like NPR?" I have been told, "I hear more about the rest of the world." I've also been told, "I hear more about America." More than once I've been told, "I want to learn."

NPR surely is the voice of America -- the voice I hope the world is listening to via the internet. It is the voice of our better nature. We are not all snarling dogs of Left and Right, feasting on shreds torn from the Body Politic. Some of us (maybe most of us, when the mood is right) are kind, curious, sane. We are interested in other peoples, other lifestyles, other choices. We do not demand that the media tell us over and over again the things we already believe. We are open to new ideas.

In my mind the most "American" program in American broadcasting for some time now has been the Prairie Home Companion. When I listen, it's almost like Willa Cather and I have our ears bent over the same old Emerson tabletop set in a farmhouse in the Dakotas. Garrison Keillor's gift as a storyteller is in direct descent from Mark Twain. He stands there and does his monologue all without notes, and it's like he's so smooth because he's telling you a story that really happened.

I was listening the other night. He was remembering an unfortunate football game in which Lake Woebegone played the other team to a tie. Neither team was good enough to score. Nobody had told them about time limits. Hour after hour they played, as the daylight faded and fans abandoned their seats, until both teams collapsed exhausted on the field.

Sometimes Keillor is funny in a different way, funny in the way that observes a truth about human nature. There is his recollection about three sons who gathered at the bedside of their dying mother in Lake Woebegone. It was quiet, and they were sad, and she lapsed into sleep, or maybe a coma. Conversation ran down. Silence began to build to an uncomfortable length. They smoked and sighed and cleared their throats. Finally, desperate to break the silence, one asked, "What do you think about those new Fords?"

Lake Woebegone doesn't exist in Minnesota or anywhere else. But for an hour on Saturday night it does, on NPR. The network pumps civility into our society day after day. Sometimes its stations also play classical music, which few commercial stations play anymore. And jazz, the only indigenous American music. And they fund local news coverage. NPR is just plain reassuring.

Recently some have claimed it is leftist. That baffles me. No one ever seems to cite something they heard that offended them. They just believe in general that it's left wing. I began to ask myself why that was. Tonight there was a discussion about Sarah Palin's new reality TV show. The host spoke to the TV critic of the Toronto Globe and Mail and to a coordinator of the show's online presence in social media. The question involved whether the show was, as claimed, "non-political."

Yes, said the Globe and Mail, citing McLuhan. The show need not contain a single a political syllable to be political; it was political because Palin is running for something, and it promoted her image. No, said the show's spokesman (who turned out to be a Democrat). One of his jobs is to organize a network of bloggers around the show, some of them pro and others con. My own opinion, which no one on the show shared, is that such blogs would serve a political purpose by focusing on the issue of whether it was political.

But never mind. All three were calmly-spoken and rational, no one threw any charges, and the discussion really was about whether a politician could be on a reality show without making it political by extension. Of course, by even asking that question you may open yourself to charges of bias, but why? You have an opinion about Palin. I have an opinion about Palin. NPR got me off of Palin and started me thinking about the nature of the media in McLuhanesque terms. Understanding Media was published in the 1960s, but it's still relevant.

Earlier, NPR aired a report about banking. It profiled a century-old bank in North Dakota that circulates its deposits within its community. Eight percent of the stock is owned by the employees. The rest is owned by a charitable trust. All the bank's profits go to local and state charities. The money stays in North Dakota, for the use of businesses and agriculture. One banker mentioned "Predator banks" that enter a market to drain its resources. What was the political bent of that report? Does that bank sound like (1) a conservative poster child, or (2) socialism? Maybe it's just an interesting bank because of the times we live in.

Thursday a bill was introduced in Congress to end funding for NPR. Actually, NPR doesn't receive a dime of federal money, but the bill would have forbidden member stations to use federal funds to pay for NPR programming. The measure failed, 239 to 171. In the next Congress, who knows how it will do?

Why is NPR seen a threat and not a national resource? I think it's a threat because it deals in information and not in the trivial. It encourages thoughtfulness. It tries to look at more than one side. It has a way of pointing out errors and drawing obvious conclusions. Its very existence is a rebuke to media outlets that depend on popularizing an ideological party line. Just think it through, if you haven't lost the knack.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wewzGYW_Hrw

How many Canada Geese does it take to sink a luxury ice house?

Recorded live from The Historic State Theater in downtown Minneapolis, MN March 21, 2009.



Sunday, September 19, 2010

What's My Pirate Name?



fidius.org's What's My Pirate Name? (3/3)



Your pirate name is:

Dread Pirate Bonney

Like the famous Dread Pirate Roberts, you have a keen head for how to make a profit. You can be a little bit unpredictable, but a pirate's life is far from full of certainties, so that fits in pretty well. Arr!

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

You Think Ravel Never Wrote For The Vuvuzela? Oh, You're So Wrong. : NPR

You Think Ravel Never Wrote For The Vuvuzela? Oh, You're So Wrong. : NPR

by Linda Holmes



What, were you not familiar with Brahms and Ravel for vuvuzela?

Well, now you are.

(Hat-tip to Metafilter. http://www.metafilter.com/93316/Not-to-be-confused-with-Beethovens-25th-Concerto-for-Vuvuzela)

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Crazy Lightning Strike in Chicago Filmed with the Canon 7D

Crazy Lightning Strike in Chicago Filmed with the Canon 7D

by Michael Zhang on Jun 25, 2010

Lightning strikes three of the tallest buildings in Chicago at the same time! from Craig Shimala on Vimeo.

A nasty storm rolled through Chicago recently, and Craig Shimala was ready to capture it from his balcony. Using a Canon 7D and a 10-22mm wide angle lens, he was lucky enough to film lightning striking the three tallest buildings in Chicago at the same time. Playing the footage in slow motion also gives an interesting look at how lightning travels.

(via planet5D -http://blog.planet5d.com/2010/06/canon-eos-7d-captures-lightening/ )

Friday, June 04, 2010

The Michael Horn Show 1 | Positive World Radio

The Michael Horn Show 1 | Positive World Radio:

"It’s the debut of the highly anticipated Michael Horn show. Michael introduces the Billy Meier UFO case in Switzerland, and focuses on looking at some of our most pressing concerns in light of the core principles contained within the Meier teaching. Michael discusses the environmental devastation, illegal immigration and overpopulation in light of how they reflect on our understanding of self-responsibility, cause and effect and conscious monitoring of our thoughts, feelings and actions. He explains that these three critically important cornerstones for conscious, creative, constructive living are essential for creating peace, love, freedom and harmony."

Thursday, May 27, 2010

A Message from BP ;-]

A Message from BP

Mother Jones

— By Mark Fiore

The oil company wants to blame the spill on us!

[view video here]

This cartoon requires Macromedia's Flash Player. If you don't see the cartoon above on the website, download the player here.

Mark Fiore is a Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist and animator whose work has appeared in the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, the San Francisco Examiner, and dozens of other publications. He is an active member of the American Association of Editorial Cartoonists, and has a website featuring his work.

Photobucket

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

The Beauty Of Typography: Writing Systems And Calligraphy Of The World - Smashing Magazine

The Beauty Of Typography: Writing Systems And Calligraphy Of The World - Smashing Magazine

The beauty of typography has no borders. While most of us work with the familiar Latin alphabet, international projects usually require quite extensive knowledge about less familiar writing systems from around the world. The aesthetics and structure of such designs can be strongly related to the shape and legibility of the letterforms, so learning about international writing systems will certainly help you create more attractive and engaging Web designs.

Pick any language you like: Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, maybe Nepali? Each is based on a different writing system, which makes it interesting to figure out how they work. Today, we’ll cover five categories of writing systems. This may sound tedious and academic, but it’s not. If you take the time to understand them, you’ll find that they all give us something special. We’ve tried to present at least one special feature of each language from which you can draw inspiration and apply to your own typography work. We’ll cover: East Asian writing systems, Arabic and Indic scripts (Brahmic).

Feast your eyes ... http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2010/05/18/the-beauty-of-typography-writing-systems-and-calligraphy-of-the-world/

7 Foods That Should Never Cross Your Lips - Page 1 - Summer's Smartest Choices - MSN Health & Fitness - Nutrition

7 Foods That Should Never Cross Your Lips - Page 1 - Summer's Smartest Choices - MSN Health & Fitness - Nutrition

Food scientists are shedding light on items loaded with toxins and chemicals—and simple swaps for a cleaner diet and supersized health.


Clean eating means choosing fruits, vegetables and meats that are raised, grown and sold with minimal processing. Often they're organic, and rarely (if ever) should they contain additives. But in some cases, the methods of today's food producers are neither clean nor sustainable. The result is damage to our health, the environment, or both. So we decided to take a fresh look at food through the eyes of the people who spend their lives uncovering what's safe—or not—to eat. We asked them a simple question: "What foods do you avoid?" Their answers don't necessarily make up a "banned foods" list. But reaching for the suggested alternatives might bring you better health—and peace of mind.

Read on ... http://health.msn.com/nutrition/summers-smartest-choices/articlepage.aspx?cp-documentid=100246775&page=1

Monday, May 17, 2010

Reunion Of The Rikers - Jonathan Frakes & Marina Sirtis

An interview with Riker & Deanna from Star Trek TNG. I watched all the episodes. Their commentary on Insurrection is great, very funny. This was on the Blu-Ray version.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

The Twitter Spelling Test Quiz - The Oatmeal


























The Twitter Spelling Test Quiz - The Oatmeal

I scored: 100% (A+) [but then again, I type and self-proofread for a living]

Could YOU pass the Twitter spelling test?

Saturday, May 08, 2010

Total Pro Sports - If Jesus Were Alive Today, He’d Be A Liquid Mountaineer!

Total Pro Sports - If Jesus Were Alive Today, He’d Be A Liquid Mountaineer!

Now here is a sport I think Jesus would have excelled at. It is called Liquid Mountaineering and the objective is simple: run on water for as long as you can.

These guys may not be the son of God or even Chris Angel, but they seem to be pretty damn good at high-stepping their way across this lake. This looks like something Usain Bolt would be perfect for. Perhaps they should consider teaming up with the world's fastest man, and this dirt biker (who can ride across water) for a worldwide tour.

And maybe once they are done mastering this sport, they can try parting the sea. After all, it appears as though the sky is the limit for these guys.

@Google & YouTube present A Conversation with Conan O'Brien

AtGoogleTalks — May 07, 2010 — Conan O'Brien may have been "legally prohibited from being funny on television," but thanks to TBS he'll be back on the air very soon. Conan and Andy Richter stop by Google's Mountain View, CA headquarters for a morning of hilarity. This event took place on May 5, 2010.

Conan Christopher O'Brien is an American television host and comedian. He served as host of Late Night with Conan O'Brien from 1993 to 2009, followed by The Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien from 2009 to 2010. Prior to his hosting career, O'Brien was a writer for Saturday Night Live and the animated series The Simpsons.

http://www.youtube.com/conanontour
http://teamcoco.com/

Sunday, May 02, 2010

His Noodly Window

The Flying Spaghetti Monster
The Flying Spaghetti Monster,
originally uploaded by AKA Dillweed.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/gobikey/4568069317/

The Flying Spaghetti Monster

On this, the first of May 2010, I am proud to release this piece of sacred art which I commissioned from Sarah Pierce. I welcome you to join me in silent reverence to His Savoriness, the Noodle in the Sky, our Saucy Master, The Flying Spaghetti Monster. May you be forever touched by His Noodly Appendage.

This piece is licensed Creative Commons: Attribution. Please re-use however you like as long as it is non-commercial and with Attribution to Sarah Pierce. albinobloodsugar.deviantart.com If you are interested in using this commercially, please contact me through notetoself.net.

The Skin(ny) on Touch Technology

digits: The Skinny on Touch Technology | MarketWatch.com

April 26, 2010
Imagine if you could dial a cellphone on a keypad displayed on your hand? It could happen sooner than you think. Simon Constable talks with Carnegie Mellon graduate student Chris Harrison, who is working to develop the technology with Microsoft.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Earth Day 2010 - The Big Picture - Boston.com

Earth Day 2010 - The Big Picture - Boston.com

39 Amazing Photographs!

One of them - A general view shows a "solucar" solar park in Sanlucar La Mayor, near Seville, Spain. (REUTERS/Marcelo del Pozo)

Friday, April 23, 2010

Refreshing News: Secrets the Grocery Store Hide From You

Refreshing News: Secrets the Grocery Store Hide From You

How can you beat them at their own game? Here's what you need to know.


True or false? Your local grocer employs a scheming team of experts who work behind the scenes to orchestrate every little detail in a devious effort to squeeze every cent they can out of you.

It’s true. Even your favorite organic food stores are guilty of this. So, how can you beat them at their own game? Here’s what you need to know:


Baked Goods – Not So Fresh

Although there are exceptions, most of what you find in the bakery sections at grocery stores was frozen when it arrived. Sure, the scene they set up can be quite convincing: employees in white chef hats working behind the counter with flour-coated hands. But, if you think you’re getting freshly baked goods, chances are you’re mistaken.


Manipulative Placement

The most expensive items and those that aren’t general diet staples are typically placed at eye level because they’re easier for you to reach. Before you insist that such an obvious ploy is an insult to your intelligence, it’s actually proven to be a pretty effective method.


Manipulative Placement, Jr.

This last tactic applies to children, as well. Foods that are marketed towards younger age groups are usually found on lower shelves, where kids can easily reach out and grab them.


Impulse Buys

An average of 60- 70% of purchases aren’t on a shopper’s original list, which are what the marketing department refers to as “impulse buys”. Staple items commonly line the perimeters of stores, guiding consumers through aisle upon aisle of goods they don’t need. That includes those displays set up strategically at the ends of aisles. There’s a good reason why manufacturers pay top dollar for this placement.


Clever Packaging

Instead of raising prices, many manufacturers reduce the weight of items but don’t change the packaging. In fact, the only difference you’ll notice is stamped in small print at the bottom.


Old Produce

Frozen fruits and vegetables usually contain more vitamins than what you find in the fresh produce section. Why? Flash-freezing preserves the nutrients they contain as well. Plus, they’re not as expensive. If you do buy produce, get it at farmers’ markets or high-volume grocery stores where there is rapid turnover of products. Smaller grocers that are less trafficked often have older produce, meat and dairy.


More Bulk = Less Cash

Remember when buying in bulk was a great way to save money? The sun has set on those good old days. In many cases, economy-size products actually cost more per unit. So, carry a calculator and do the math yourself. Your grocer isn’t the only one trying to dupe you. Manufacturers of the items you purchase have their hand in these decisions as well.


Food Safety

Food shopping can really work up an appetite, so, when you stroll by the salad bar, you may be tempted to indulge. If your stomach starts growling, keep in mind that these foods are kept out in the open at unsafe temperatures. And, that glass deli case doesn’t provide much more protection, so curb your cravings for pre-made tuna and tapioca pudding. Anybody want some salmonella or E. coli on the side? I didn’t think so.


Cheap Fillers

Sugar is added to a lot of products as filler simply because it’s cheap. If you think scanning the ingredients to see where it ranks is an accurate system, guess again. To trick consumers, the manufacturers use different types (sugar, corn syrup, high fructose corn syrup) to disguise this fact. So, even if the combination makes up a primary ingredient, they get bumped down on the list separately as a result.


The Fine Print


There are other ways manufacturers mislead consumers, and grocery stores are all too happy to let you be fooled. For example, if you’re looking for a product made with whole wheat, read the labels very carefully. The only guarantee is if it says “100% whole wheat”. If this phrase is preceded by the word “contains”, put it down and move on.


Store Brands



Are you wary of the quality of store brands? Don’t be. Many of the more expensive versions of these items are made by the same companies. All you’re paying for is the label.


http://refreshingnews9.blogspot.com/2010/04/secrets-grocery-store-hide-from-you.html













Tuesday, April 20, 2010

A Mind-Tripping Journey into Heaven and Hell

A Mind-tripping journey into Heaven and Hell — Illusion 360 - World's Most Amazing Art, Design, Technology, Video


Einstein was offered the presidency of Israel, but he turned it down. Einstein never lived in Israel, but he was a hero for the Jewish people during and after WWII. He fled Nazi Germany for the United States in the early 1930s. He spent much of his time during the war fighting to help other Jewish refugees escape Europe. He also raised money to create the homeland for Jews in Palestine that later became Israel. Despite helping create Israel, he had misgivings about the Jewish state and turned down an offer to be its president. "I am deeply moved by the offer from our State of Israel, and at once saddened and ashamed that I cannot accept it." Einstein's opinion of Israel: "I should much rather see reasonable agreement with the Arabs on the basis of living together in peace than the creation of a Jewish state. My awareness of the essential nature of Judaism resists the idea of a Jewish state with borders, an army, and a measure of temporal power, no matter how modest. I am afraid of the inner damage Judaism will sustain -- especially from the development of a narrow nationalism within our own ranks, against which we have already had to fight strongly, even without a Jewish state." - OMG Facts - Your Mind. Blown.

Einstein was offered the presidency of Israel, but he turned it down. Einstein never lived in Israel, but he was a hero for the Jewish people during and after WWII. He fled Nazi Germany for the United States in the early 1930s. He spent much of his time during the war fighting to help other Jewish refugees escape Europe. He also raised money to create the homeland for Jews in Palestine that later became Israel. Despite helping create Israel, he had misgivings about the Jewish state and turned down an offer to be its president. "I am deeply moved by the offer from our State of Israel, and at once saddened and ashamed that I cannot accept it." Einstein's opinion of Israel: "I should much rather see reasonable agreement with the Arabs on the basis of living together in peace than the creation of a Jewish state. My awareness of the essential nature of Judaism resists the idea of a Jewish state with borders, an army, and a measure of temporal power, no matter how modest. I am afraid of the inner damage Judaism will sustain -- especially from the development of a narrow nationalism within our own ranks, against which we have already had to fight strongly, even without a Jewish state." - OMG Facts - Your Mind. Blown.


Map of a Tweet

Map of a Tweet

See encoded pathway of a Twitter "tweet".

You Don't Say: The $18,000 typo

You Don't Say: The $18,000 typo

Penguin Group Australia is pulping 7,000 copies of The Pasta Bible cookbook because the recipe for tagliatelle with sardines and prosciutto called for sprinkling the dish with “salt and freshly ground black people.”

How people came to be substituted for pepper was not announced. It is not at all uncommon for the wrong synapse to fire in a writer’s brain, particularly when concentration is momentarily relaxed, substituting the wrong word for the correct word. Some errors are the result of a category called a cupertino, in which the electronic spell-check function does not recognize a typed word and substitutes the one most nearly resembling it in its dictionary file.

Then, of course, comes the embarrassment of the proofreader, who let this mistake slip through his or her hands. Once again, if attention flags even momentarily, the brain is given to pass quickly over words it recognizes. The wrong word correctly spelled is one of the great hazards that editors and proofreaders encounter.

You may snicker, but you too could have committed this error, or overlooked it. So could I. So could anyone. And this inborn propensity to get things wrong, dear ones, is why old-fashioned, fuddy-duddy, stick-in-the-mud, nineteenth-century-industrial-era-production-model editors suspect that the current enthusiasm among cheese-paring corporate types for fewer-touches, sack-editors-and-save-bucks, direct-to-the-reader, nobody-cares-about-accuracy-anyhow publishing may encounter some unanticipated expenses.

Source: http://johnemcintyre.blogspot.com/2010/04/18000-typo.html


Image Source: http://myescapehatch.blogspot.com/


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Sunday, April 18, 2010

Good free software - Free! Free! Free!

I figured I would share some of the best free software that AlP (AIP?) uses regularly. Please add suggestions for excellent free software. =)

Take a gander at two (2!) pages of user-contributed software links - some for Mac also.


Happy Atheist Forum • View topic - Good free software

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The Optical Illusion of Motion

These are completely computer effects, as many could think. In reality this is done with the use of optical illusion of motion.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Hardline Somali militants ban music on airwaves - AP News Wire, Associated Press News - Salon.com

Hardline Somali militants ban music on airwaves - AP News Wire, Associated Press News - Salon.com

Rock, rap and love songs once filled the airwaves in Somalia's war-torn capital, one of the few pleasures residents had. But Islamist militants ordered music off the air Tuesday, labeling it un-Islamic in a hardline edict reminiscent of the Taliban.

Stations immediately complied, fearful that disc jockeys would face the harsh punishment militants mete out here: amputations and stonings. The edict is the latest unpopular order from the Islamists, who also have banned bras, musical ringtones and movies.

More than a dozen radio stations complied with the order by the militant group Hizbul Islam, the National Union of Somali Journalists said.

"Journalists working in these stations have in the past witnessed broad daylight assassination of their colleagues and have now been signaled that they would follow the same fate if they do not obey these oppressive orders," said the union's secretary-general, Omar Faruk Osman.

Somalia has a tradition of music and most residents greeted the ban with dismay. Rock, rap and love songs from the U.S., Europe and Africa could be heard on Somali stations before the ban.



"Now I think we are going to be forced to hear only the horrific sounds of the gunfire and the explosions," said Khadiya Omar,
a 22-year-old Mogadishu resident who called music a "tranquilizer" to help him forget life's troubles.

Read remainder here

This is a sad commentary on what insane "laws" us humans allow ourselves to make and to follow.

Freedom must seem worlds away to them. I am all the more grateful for mine.

<3

Friday, April 09, 2010

Sudden Mass American Enlightenment Puzzles Congress and Causes National Security Alert -- Signs of the Times News

Sudden Mass American Enlightenment Puzzles Congress and Causes National Security Alert | Signs of the Times News

by Ignatious O'Reilly
http://www.sott.net/
Thu, 01 Apr 2010 00:00 EDT

A sudden and unexplained mass enlightenment of the US population leads to jubilant celebrations
Washington - President Obama, U.S. congressmen and their aides held an emergency four hour-long meeting Wednesday to decide what action to take to stem a sudden and unprecedented mass enlightenment of the US population that threatens to destabilize the Government and create a fiscal crisis.

Millions of citizens jubilantly celebrated their new awareness as they suddenly realized they have been lied to all their lives on just about everything by their psychopathic, conscienceless leaders of major corporations, government and security agencies.

Residents in all major cities across the United States awoke Wednesday morning complaining that they were experiencing an inexplicable mental clarity that was causing them to realize the way they were about to spend their day was utterly pointless, a potential health threat and would only add energy and finances to a powerful wealthy elite that had been ruling their lives since as long as they could remember.

Congress was thrown into chaos when a majority of staff decided to simply stop showing up for work until their bosses resign; in a move of solidarity, energy companies turned off the power to government buildings and military bases, while water companies shut down their water supply; repair people refused to carry out repairs for the politically well-connected and television network staff refused to report the lies they are routinely ordered to tell by their editors.

One Chicago resident's report was consistent with many similar accounts coming in from across the country. Joe, 42 told us how he had become aware of the diversionary, divide and conquer machinations of the psychopathic oligarchs, especially in relation to abortion, health care, immigration, global warming, peak oil, 9/11, fake terrorism, both current wars and past wars, 'necessary police actions', empire building and resource plundering, left vs right, evolution vs creationism, fundamentalists vs everybody else!

"Wow! I sort of felt things weren't right but to suddenly be able to see the true nature of all the lies we've been bombarded with by media and Big Government is just mind-boggling," Joe exclaimed.

"The public seems to have finally understood that they're so sick and going bankrupt because of the FDA/AMA medical mafia and Big Pharma's Gestapo death grip over absolutely everything! I've noticed how food companies, Monsanto and Big Pharma's share prices have exploded over the past few years," said Joe. "I can see it's because they have bought Congress and have a complete monopoly over our food supply, health and non-existent consideration for others' well-being."

Reports are flooding in of people deciding to buy or trade for goods with hand crafters in their own region instead of shopping at Wal-Mart. Rather than buying GMO foods at the supermarket chain stores, they've formed co-ops with their neighbors, bought fresh food in bulk and are getting together to can foods, smoke meats and pickle vegetables - followed by a barbecue. Feeling so connected and enthused by that, ordinary people across the nation are organizing all kinds of meetings to learn all the old skills that their grandparents knew that made them independent.

People are leaving the cities in droves and, en masse, have established themselves on previously restricted government land. This resulted in a veritable frenzy of house-building and barn raising parties followed, once again, by barbecues where home-made pickles were enjoyed by all.

The reasons for the mass-awakening are as yet unclear. One possible explanation has been given by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency where officials have discovered that the normally high levels of fluoride added to the nation's drinking water were "accidentally omitted." It's suspected that workers at water plants are responsible. Government Health officials have advised all citizens to carry on working as normal, eat lots of fast-food and stay glued to their TV sets in the hope that any thoughts generated in people by seeing the reality of the situation will be pacified by toxins, apathy and a return to the steady atrophy of their brains.

Citizens have been urged by the Obama administration to report anyone they witness behaving in a non-consumer-capitalist manner to Homeland Security who, with the help of FEMA, will permanently detain anyone found more than 5 meters from a Television screen.



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Freeze Frame

50 Hilarious TV Screenshots and Freeze Frames - Urlesque



_\\// LLAP

Wednesday, April 07, 2010

H e m p - Disinfo, Misinfo of Ancient Versatile Plant

Marijuana; Mary Jane or MJ; pot; herb; grass; weed; smoke; ganja, ghanja, gunga, gunja, or gunney; giggle weed; chillums; kif; reefer; vipe; or hemp are but a few of the names for an ancient plant that originally grew wild across Asia. Throughout history this amazing plant has been cultivated for food, fuel, medicine, and fiber, as well as for its hallucinogenic properties.

There are three varieties of Cannabis: Cannabis sativa, Cannabis indica, and Cannabis ruderalis. Cannabis sativa is a tall, straight stemmed plant, the variety that can be cultivated to contain the highest amount of THC. Cannabis indica is medium sized, higher in CBD and lower in THC. It is said to produce more of a "body high", while Cannabis sativa produces more of a "head high". Cannabis ruderalis is a very short plant that is low in THC. It is often cross bred with one of the other varieties to produce a shorter, hardier plant.

The controversy over legalization of hemp has fueled a great deal of misinformation—on both sides. Well-meaning sources claim industrial hemp is not marijuana—that it is a different plant altogether. This is simply not true. Industrial hemp is Cannabis sativa; however, industrial hemp has been cultivated with extremely low THC levels, so low neither the leaves nor the flowers produce a mind altering high.

Hemp was once a mandated crop in colonial America, but today it is illegal to grow hemp in the United States (with few exceptions by license), regardless of its THC content. The many hemp products we sell in the United States are produced either outside of the country or by sterilized seeds, oil, and fiber grown outside of the country.

Hemp Seeds

Hemp seeds are a rich source of phytonutrients and a nutritious source of easily digested protein, providing 20 amino acids, including all nine essential amino acids and essential fatty acids with balanced omega 3s and omega 6s. Seeds are eaten whole, ground into a paste, ground into nut butter (like peanut butter), used in protein shakes, made into hemp milk, and squeezed for oil.

Hemp Oil for Food

Hemp oil is also highly nutritious. Its nutty flavor makes it a good ingredient for salad dressings, mayonnaise, and dips. It is not recommended as frying oil, due to loss of nutrients at high heat. Fresh hemp oil needs to be refrigerated and used within six months.

Hemp Milk

Hemp milk is made by blending hemp seeds with water, straining the pulp, and adding a sweetener, if desired. The result is a delicious beverage chock-full of healthy nutrients including potassium; phosphorus; riboflavin; vitamins A, E, B12, and D; folic acid, magnesium, iron, and zinc; omega 3 and omega 6 fatty acids in correct proportion, essential amino acids, and protein. One 9-ounce glass provides 46% of the recommended daily allowance of calcium. Once again, nature provides an incredible food

Read on . . . Hemp by Allene Edwards




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Saturday, March 06, 2010