“The Truth is Out There”

Until this last weekend, I was pretty much stumped as to how, in this age of access to incredible amounts of information, without even laving your home or office, a significant number of people in this country could continually claim the US Government was behind the 9/11 attacks.

I have long held that the images coming out of Hollywood have had an undercurrent of an effect on many parts of society, particularly with the tend to show all adults as either stupid, ignorant, or corrupt (or any combination of those) and only children were capable of seeing the real danger, finding the real criminals, or knowing the truth. That has sent a subliminal message that anoyone of authority can’t be trusted, and, we see the results in the legal system.

Cigarette Man

This past Saturday, I was channel surfing and the last 30 minutes of “The X-Files” movie was on. I settled back on the couch and then a “BFO” (Blinding flash of the obvious) hit me. I didn’t know for how long, but I knew that series had been aroound a long time. I just looked it up: Begun in 1993, and ran through 2002. The movie was out in 1998.

The popularity of this series, which showed not just the US, but a world shadow organization, was cooperating with the aliens, and doing what ever they needed to do to keep this alliance a secret.

From Wikipedia:

The X-Files was one of the network’s first major hits, and its main characters and slogans (“The Truth Is Out There,” “Trust No One,” “Deny Everything,” “I Want to Believe”) became pop culture touchstones, simultaneously tapping into and inspiring a plethora of conspiracy theories, paranoia about the U.S. government, and belief in the existence of extraterrestrial life.

The “Generation C” types have grown up with a well done fictional series, and have failed to discern between truth and fiction.

I think this may help explain the vast numbers of our citizens who believe the Government is behind all of the GWoT, because, we all know….The truth is out there.

Originally posted at: Chaotic Synaptic Activity

Random firings…

Neurons randomly connecting. Shorting. Grounding out (but not to third).

I haven’t been able to listen to the whole thing to discover just how it all comes out (I can only listen to just so much–about 30 seconds at a time–of the the over-produced, derivative crap that is contemporary “country” music), but Eric Lee Beddingfield may be onto something here. (Hint: click on the “Listen” link on song number 6.)

The joys of google: I was looking for something else, but this link looked interesting. I’m awarding the author my own PhDBS.* He deserves it more than I. The degree’s in the mail, bub.

If you want to explore a pop/contemporary genre of music, Pandora might be your cuppa tea. It’s an interesting, but extremely limited, idea. It seems to think “music” means only things written/performed in the last few years. “Classic” jazz, to it, is something about 5 years old (or less). Still, if you want to set up an internet radio station to play a wide selection of a limited number of genres with songs from recent years, it might just suit you.

Richard Dooling’s post, “Moot Court Hearing On The Petition of a Conscious Computer,” points to a piece at Ray Kurzweil’s site (with… exactly the same title–*heh*). And people used to have me convinced I was weird… I think Ray Kurzweil’s got a lock on creative weirdness, now.

Oh, Dooling’s “Randon Quote” ain’t half bad, either:

Horse sense is the thing a horse has which keeps it from betting on people.—W.C. Fields

More goodies at his site.

Sharp Left Turn: My definition of bad coffee used to revolve around a high school band trip to Mexico. Some of us roomed overnight at one stop at a convent school (it was during a school break for the girls, so keep you imaginations in your pants, guys). Breakfast was… interesting. The coffe at least tasted fresh ground. I swear they’d just dug it up outa the graveyard next door. But recently, I had to revise my definition of bad coffee. I had the “opportunity” to taste a sippa coffee from the break room at my wife’s work the other day. The words “Wolverine piss” sprang readily to mind as I spat the stuff out… (Sippin’ some good stuff, now.) I’d sooner have some day old brewed by me than get within spittin’ distance of any more of that stuff from Wonder Woman’s workplace.

Let’s put this essay on the next National Adult Literacy Survey for all those subliterate pseudo-adults who can’t read a bus schedule…

There is an old conundrum in queueing theory that goes like this. A passenger arrives at a bus-stop at some arbitrary point in time. Buses arrive according to a Poisson process (i.e., completely randomly) at the bus-stop on average every 30 minutes. How long can a passenger expect to wait for the next bus?

sums.jpg

Go figure.

And last (at last!)

Lost Pirates


An idea whose time has come… and gone. (Go here for more of this sort… )


Trackposted at The Random Yak’s UN-certain Observances (and Midweek OTP), of course.


*PhDBS=doctorate in bovine scatology. I’ve mostly closed my practice in the field, so I no longer need the sheepskin, anyway.

At least someone feels better…

Using My Powers for Good reminds us that we can celebrate the Turkey Testicle Festival in Ft Myers, FL, and that there are 12 other celebrations nationwide that use the word “testicle” in their names.

As UMPFG says,

“How could that not make me feel at least a little better?”

I guess the other testicular festivities also include the Orchiectomy Delectomy? The Monad’s Gonad? And of course, the venerable Ball Ball…

Is appreciation of these “testicle festival” female humor?

😉

I’m sure we all feel muuuuch better now…

PSA: Viral iPod Owner Search/Tuesday OTP

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Also note the other fine blogs featuring linkfests at Linkfest Haven.

Linkfest Haven


Rick (The Real Ugly American) has suggested linking to David Berlind’s post attempting to find the owner of a lost iPod.

Whatever. *heh*

If you live in the New England area and flew on United Airlines on or about October 9th or 10th [and lost your iPod].Then contact David Berlind. He has your iPod.

Well, maybe. There could have been several (hundred?) folks who lost iPods under those circunstances, but the photos and music selection stored on the thing ought to make identifying the ownder easy enough… if the owner sees one of these blogposts and comes forward, that is. And that’s kinda the idea of this lil experiment.

If this isn’t a test for how the blogosphere can get things done, I’m not sure what is. As a part of this test, if you happen to read this blog entry and you have a blog, please spread the word and let’s see if the viral nature of the blogosphere can help this iPod find its owner.

Well? Gonna post about this for your readers, too?

Revisiting Tet: A Chance to Do It Right

Originally posted @ Chaotic Synaptic Acitivity, and as a guest post here on third world country. Thanks for the invite, David!

Lots of discussion on President Bush acknowledging that the situation today in Iraq could have a resemblance to a battle fought almost 29 years in the past. Almost a year ago, I blogged about echos of the 1968 Tet Offensive in the current conflict.

Executive Summary of Tet:

The Tet Offensive was conducted during an agreed upon truce between the beligerants in the conflict.

The NVA used the Viet Cong as an “ablative shield.” This worked to clear out the “tainted” South Vietnamese fighters by sacrificing them “for the cause.”

Despite a few VC getting into the US Embassy compound, they were all killed in the yard, and did not get into the building.

The US and international press presented the Tet Offensive as a success for the forces opposing the Government of South Vietnam.

The press was wrong in a military sense, but were correct in the historical context, yet they had no clue at the time how correct they were.

The NVA understood the power of the press had “crossed over” and had become more of an effective weapon that raw military might, which led to the strategic move.

———————————
Commentary for today:

Yes, it is similar to today in the sense that the enemy understands:

  • 1) How we have abandoned, as a culture, any significant effort to keep ourselves informed beyond the headline of any article, or cover statement of current news magazines;
  • 2) Anything the tradtional media states must be true and;
  • 3) The public contains significant numbers of skeptical people who believe the US Government is behind all the conflict for the purpose of lining their pockets, or those of their friends in industry;
  • 4) Regardless of how devastating such an effort is in the short run in terms of physical resources or manpower it is to them, it has the potential to cause us to turn our gaze away and vote for the appeasers, just as was done in Spain.

Differences:

  • 1) We have historical perspective, as a result of the long term effect of the 1968 events to view this period in history;
  • 2) The war then was defined by soverign nations and international boundries, fueled by an idealology, this time it’s a war defined by one side with national boundries, and an opponent that knows no territorial constraints, yet it still filled by an idealology;
  • 3) If the insurgents do make a “final sprint” in the hopes of biasing the outcome of the November 7th elections, they will be in poor logistical shape to follow up on any attacks, therefore we need to be ready to step up and squash them when they are at a low point militarily and;
  • 4) Our political leaders can use this analogy to their advantage, while the press will try to use it to the nation’s disadvantage.

In the aftermath of the Tet Offensive, and even the Vietnam War, both sides of the equation, the Coalition and the insurgent forces, can take lessons learned away from the Tet Offensive. It is not a perfectly modeled analogy, but it has similarities. It would serve the press well to do some more detailed study of the actual battles across South Vietnam. It would serve the military, and our political leadership well to study the battles across South Vietnam.

If the military has read the tea leaves correctly, they will have stockpiled supplies, pre-postioned troops and tactical/strategic reserves, and have shored up the defenses. In addition, focused analysis of intelligence, to help tactically prepare for the next 3 1/2 weeks. Once the battle has joined, then it will be time to crush the exposed enemy forces, then be prepared to follow them, physically or via collected intel, back to their safe houses to continue the fight, with one intention to eliminate every possible combatant, then, they will have correctly interpreted the lessons of February 1968.

The press should spend some time studying history, beyond what some old timer in the press room tells them. I’m sure George Stephanopoulos doesn’t comprehend the bigger implications this all has within the story from a war long ago, which I discussed above. If he somehow thinks the current levels of violence, like Tet will cause us to “cut and run,” he has to understand the US military didn not “cut and run” from that battle, in fact, they stood tall and obliterated the VC in massive numbers. We are doing the same thing today. If anyone cut and ran, it was the Democratically controlled Congress, that withdrew funds from the Vietnamization effort and the US military for non-Army support for the ARVN forces.

Our leadership needs to prepare us for a potential “October Surprise” from the enemy in the form of massive, coordinated, widespread and well documented attacks, and also the knowledge that our military is prepared to take it to the enemy and put the dampers on civial war, insurrection and other violence behind us and the people or Iraq. If anything, President Bush should highlight that it was the Democrats who lost their nerve in the face of the enemy, but only after a Republican took office. They certainly supported the war (and the dreaded “military-industrial complex”) while Kennedy and Johnson were in office. If any lessons should be taken away from Tet, it is that one in the last sentance.

As a final statement, even General Giap acknowledged to a US officer, many years later, that the NVA/VC never won on the battlefield of Vietnam, but he also stated, wisely and accurately, that fact was also completely irrelevant.


[edit-tbs below added by mnmus]

Trqackback posted at The Crazy Rants of Samantha Burns, Planck’s Constant and Conservative Cat.

Guard the Borders

Beheadings Aren’t Just For Islamists Anymore

By Toni at Bear Creek Ledger

Those pro-illegal aliens should be paying attention to what’s happening with the drug cartels south of the border. This is what we in the US have to look forward to if there isn’t something done to control our southern borders.

We also have Venezuela’s Chavez giving legal ID’s to members of Hezbollah and Hamas but he is also assisting their efforts to become proficient in Spanish to help these terrorists to infiltrate the US.

Here’s a story that is definitely not been publicized on the front page but should be since these drug cartels are controlling many areas of our southern border. I am getting to the point of believing the US should be placing active duty troops on our southern border to protect us. There is an assault and invasion occuring today that has been ignored and local law enforcement doesn’t have a prayer against these drug cartels. And don’t tell me about “posse comitatus”! These troops would be attacking foreign invaders.

From the Modern Tribalist is a story from ContraCostaTimes:

Continue reading “Guard the Borders”

Monday Morning Roundup

Yeh, yeh: I do a roundup on a “regular” basis, all right… determined not by some arbitrary external control like a calendar but by the amount of noise being made by the BBs rattling around in the tin can between my ears.

😉

It’s getting noisy in here–can hardly hear the voices–so, another roundup.

Leading off: a blog that’s new to me. This one’s a keeper (need to update my blogroll and make sure I read through it more faithfully–*heh*). Chaotic Synaptic Activity tracked back to twc with a trenchant analysis of the Vietnam War/Iraq War analogy being pushed by the Hivemind. The BBs in my head were drowning out the voices, but I could hear them all saying, “Yeh, that’s pretty much what we’ve been trying to tell ya!” *heh*

The Vent, qua “The View”: four right-wing babes take on the issues of the day… To see it is to believe it. 🙂

The Maniyak has a clear exposition on homosexuality that will certainly be anathema to those angry, shrill, whiny, sad sack, in-your-face honmosexuals who falsely claim to be gay.

Opera browser 9.1 “preview” is available for download. BE WARNED: DO NOT INSTALL AS AN UPGRADE to an existing Opera install. This is a beta and has known issues with an upgrade installation. If you want to try it (it’s pretty slick–smoothe sailing for me, so far), with the included anti-phishing, etc., improvements, have at it. But if you already use Opera, DO NOT install this over your current Opera install. Put it in a separate folder/directory. BTW, the link above is to the Windows version. See here for other versions.

Bought a used car last week. The dealer threw in a new CD player/radio, which I installed jiffy-quick. So, been downloading mp3s to reconvert and burn onto CDs (CDA-only, no mp3 play). Yeh, I know mp3-WAV is never as good as an original wav, but it’s a car. Between road noise and all the other stuff, it’ll just be enjoyable background sound. Anywho, the point of chasing after this lil brown heifer is that of all the freebie file download sites, this one has a credible collection of classical selections. Not massive, but nicely-performed. The downloads from there alone (quite apart from my personal CD collection) bid fair to make driving this lil project/errand car a tad more fun. (Yeh, like I need another project, right? *heh*)

A post at Challies.com reminded me of this article from the Winter 1997 issue of Leadership Magazine. Chock full of quotables, the article is a keeper (and yeh, I have hardcopy and e-versions archived) A Willimon quote from the article:

The other day, someone emerged from Duke Chapel and said, “I have never heard anything like that before. Where on earth did you get that?”

I replied, “Where on earth would you have heard this before? After all, this is a pagan, uninformed university environment. Where would you hear this? In the philosophy department? Watching ‘Mr. Rogers’s Neighborhood’? No, to hear this, you’ve got to get dressed and come down here on a Sunday morning.”

Oh, and the Challies.com post is well worth a read, too. 🙂

For the girls/women in your life, Dragon Lady has an important message. Really. Yeh, I know she trackback posted a link here over the weekend (Thanks!), but the message cries for a hardlink in a post.

Well, not a big roundup, just a few things that I found interesting recently. Some important, some just extracted from the BBs rolling around between my ears. Enjoy.

Do I hate getting older?/OTP

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Linkfest Haven


Do I hate getting older?

Nah: I just avoid thinking about it.

🙂

Example: The other day I ran across another blogger celebrating their “blogiversary” and thought, “Hmmm… didn’t I have one of those recently?”

*heh*

Came and went without notice. Two years ago October 6th, I became an unintentional blogger, when a blogspot blog I wanted to comment on allowed only blogspot users to comment.

“OK,” thought I, “I guess I’ll sign up and get a user name.” Having a user name, I found I could commit the unnatural act myself and crated “third world county” (my old Blogger blog), and the rest is blogging hysteria, urm, history. Oh, I gave other reasons in my innagural post, but it really was a case of “Well, I have the ID and can have a blog, so why not?” 🙂

So, for all y’all who missed my blogiversary, don’t feel bad. I missed it myself.

For the record, the premire twc post both at the old site and as imported here.

Fast, Super-easy Rice-cooker Omelet

Update: The Carnival of the Recipes is up at Nerd Family. Next week, the carnival will be held at one of my all-time fav blogs, Morning Coffee and Afterrnoon Tea, a great place to stop by even when there’s not a carnival.

Ever since the kids left home, I’ve had difficulty adjusting menu planning down to two. Yeh, yeh, I know the math, but all the pots n pans, etc., just seem better-suited to larger portions.

And so it went when we bought our 10-cup “Puck-ish” rice cooker (Wolfgang Puck Rice Cooker–a really great appliance). Too big for our family of two, now.

But it’s such an adaptable appliance that I’ve learned to use it to make meals for two. Like this morning. Quick breakfast:

Four eggs, lightly whisked.
Grated cheese (whatever we had handy–a handful)
Some bacon bits (not fake, but not freshly-cooked)
A lil salt n pepper.
Some sooper-dooper cholesterol-lowering margarine (the compromises never stop when ya have a cardio patient in the house)

Margarine melted in the rice cooker (set to “cook”)
Add eggs, salt n pepper, bacon bits, cheese, in that order. If I’d minced some onion and let it go for a bit in the margarine, that would’ve been nice, too.

Set to “cook” and walk away. Bread in the toaster oven. When the bread’s toast, the eggs are done. A nice, no-fold omelet.

Any of your fav additions to omelets would work, of course.

Fast, delicious and a healthful way to start the day every now and then (eggs: good liver food, good protein, etc.).

If you have a rice cooker other than one like mine, YMMV, but it might be worth a shot. And if you’re in the market for a rice cooker, I can recommend the Puck version. Cooked a curried chicken and rice for 2 (and a half :-)) in this one the other night. Some veggies on the side, and it was a full meal. I’ve learned to cook chicken, beef, whatever in the rice cooker, too, so it was almost (apart from the veggies) a one-dish meal.