Stop the ACLU: “District gags 14-year-olds after ‘gay’ indoctrination”

[Note: while not directly related–at this time–to the ACLU, the situation outlined below does fit closely with the ACLU’s pattern of support and does reflect the “values” that the ACLU endorses and actively pursues. See here for one of many examples.–ed]

‘Confidentiality’ promise requires students ‘not to tell their parents’

Posted: March 13, 2007

By Bob Unruh
© 2007 WorldNetDaily.com

Officials at Deerfield High School in Deerfield, Ill., have ordered their 14-year-old freshman class into a “gay” indoctrination seminar, after having them sign a confidentiality agreement promising not to tell their parents.

“This is unbelievable,” said Matt Barber, policy director for cultural issues for Concerned Women for America. “It’s not enough that students at Deerfield High are being exposed to improper and offensive material relative to unhealthy and high-risk homosexual behavior, but they’ve essentially been told by teachers to lie to their parents about it.”

It should be pointed out that minors can’t enter into a binding contract. Therefore, “confidentiality agreements” are illegal, worthless and total BS.

It also shows that the school knew what it was doing was wrong, just by the fact that they wanted to keep it from the parents.

Continue reading “Stop the ACLU: “District gags 14-year-olds after ‘gay’ indoctrination””

T-13, 1.21: Safety Belts

This is a kinda FYI/PSA about simple computer security for Windows users. Since the vast majority of computer users cruising the web are doing so with computers running some sort of Windows, and (I’m convinced by daily experience with clients) a large majority of them are regular practitioners of behavior that does nothing to discourage malware writers, identity thieves and crackers, Oh! my!, I thouhgt to meself, “Self, why not share how you’ve kept your Windowz comps free of viruses, trojans and worms (Oh, my!) as well as spyware, keyloggers and adware?”

So, here’s a rundown of some of the simple steps anyone can take to keep one’s computer safe and clean of malware of all kinds. Do note: there is nothing that can prevent a truly determined, exceptionally talented and capable cracker from gaining access to your computer (and yes, that applies to Linux and Mac boxes, too), except for complete disconnection from the internet, but the following will make such access vanishingly unlikely.

1. NEVER open unsolicited email attachments. (I’ll tell you later how to use an exeption to this rule work safely–Never say never, eh?:-))

2. Never open ANY email attachment, even an expected one from a trusted source, without scanning it with a known good, recently updated anti-virus (and even an anti-spyware) scanner.

3. READ THE SOURCE before CLICKing on ANY link in an email. Your email software should allow you to view the source of any html messages you recieve. READ THE SOURCE of links in emails before blindly CLICKing on them (again, I’ll tell you how to make an exception to this later). The danger? Phishing, mostly.

As of this writing, I do not trust any “all-in-one” security suite to handle internet security. Maybe someday, but for now:

4. Select a highly-rated, frequently-updated anti-virus software and KEEP it up to date!

5. USE it. Don’t just rely on background, automatic scanning. Manually scan attachments in emails, downloaded files, even commercial software before installing or executing anything for the first time.

6. Install a “backup” anti-virus software (deactivate any active file monitoring in your secondary anti-virus software and use it only as a backup manual scanner). Keep it up-to-date and scan your entire computer with it at least weekly.

7. Use several (two or three) well-known anti-spyware softwares. Keep them up-to-date and manualy scan your computer regularly (you can set it off and go work on something else–sure it takes a few seconds to fire one of these up and get it running, but you don’t have to sit there and watch a progress bar all day. *sheesh!* :-))

8. Use a good software firewall. No, not the Windows firewall. I said “a good software firewall” didn’t I?

9. Use a good HARDWARE firewall with stateful packet inspection. Most routers come with a fair-to-middlin’ one. If you feel up to it, build your own router/firewall and keep watch over it. You’ll learn a lot and be even more secure.

10. Switch from Internet Exploder for browsing. Yeh, yeh, IE7 looks pretty slick and almost catches up to modern browsers in functionality. But it’s still a pig and has security that works almost as well as a chicken wire swimming pool. Don’t use it (exception coming up). Use a real browser instead, like…

11. Opera or even Firefox. Either one is more secure than IE, and Opera has had even fewer security holes discovered and faster response time fixing them than Firefox. Slick browser with cool built-in features, too. YMMV.

12. Don’t use Outlook Express. Just. Do. Not. Use. It. Nope. No way, nohow. Don’t. Try Thunderbird or Opera’s built-in email client or any of a number of other free alternatives to Outlook Express (or Outlook) that are not based on Me$$y$oft’s approach to email. I like Opera’s email client because it’s even safer than Thunderbird’s, which is orders of magnitude safer that Outlook/Outlook Express, without any serious sacrifice in functionality. In fact, Thunderbird even has some neat improvements over Outlook Express. If you MUST use Outlook/Outlook Express, disable CLICKing on attachments to open and disable viewing email in Rich Text/HTML. Sure, you may “miss out” on some pretty emails, but you’ll also “miss out” on emails that can install malware if you simply view them as HTML…

13. If you absolutely MUST use IE and/or Outlook Express, and you simply will NOT be careful with email attachments or downloaded files, etc., then install AND USE software such as Sandboxie (That’s SandboxIE–*heh*). It’ll enable you to use such insecure apps and engage in other risky behavior with relative safety, IF you use it properly. You’d still be better off, if you insist on using IE, to practice the safe computing practices above AND use Sandboxie when using IE, but even if you do engage in other risky practices (like CLICKing on links you’re not sure of in emails), if you do it within a Sandboxie session, many harms done will be discarded with the session. Do note, though, that if you’re naive enough (or stupid enough after having been warned!) to CLICK on a link in an email and fall for a phishing attempt, Sandboxie won’t help you out. The con will still have your personal info…

Well, there are a few more things you can simply make habits, like keeping your Windows OS fully patched (*duh*) and running your computer in less-priviledged sessions (Admin sessions should be for Admin functions!), but these simple steps can eliminate most Windows security problems before they grab you by the throat. These won’t make you bulletproof, but darned close.


Noted at the Thursday Thirteen Hub and Trackposted to Outside the Beltway, The Virtuous Republic, Blog @ MoreWhat.com, Perri Nelson’s Website, The Random Yak, stikNstein… has no mercy, Pirate’s Cove, Stuck On Stupid, The Bullwinkle Blog, The Amboy Times, Conservative Cat, Right Voices, and Pursuing Holiness, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

Continue reading “T-13, 1.21: Safety Belts”

*Whew!* The faster I go, the behinder I get…

WARNING: I’m in a compgeeky mood right now, so if that’s not your cuppa, pass right on by, move along, nothing to see here… 🙂

Today was eaten by locusts, and I still didn’t get anything on my to-do lists done… *sigh* Backlog of post material… ah, it’ll all be dated by the time I get to it, anyway. *heh* *But you don’t think that’ll stop me, do you? :-))

This just in from John Dvorak tiptoe-ing through the keyboard (last week–I’m further behind than that, but I’ll cherrypick this one cos it’s easy):

The Junk Lifestyle and Hyper-Depreciation
Most old tech gear is worthless. So why do I let it pile up?

Gee, that’s an easy one, John. Here’s an example. I have stacks of old CRT monitors piled up in the basement (and a couple sitting around unused here in my office and another in the network closet and… you get the picture). Old 17″, 15″ and even some way, way old 14″ monitors just sitting there working on disappearing as they work through their half-lives.

So why do I have them (and that stack of 10 or twelve keyboards, the bozes of mice, old Pentium comps and even a couple of old 486s, etc.)?

Here’s the example: Son & Heir came home for Spring Break cos he has LOADS of schoolwork to do to stay even–hundreds of pages of reading for one class alone. Brought his computer with him but left his monitors at school (yeh, two; whadda ya wanna make of it? :-)).

Popped a spare 17″ (well, taken out of service on the computer I cleared out to give him desk space) and… no joy. No pic. Weird. Not gonna mess with it. So… toddled on off to another room did we and brought back a couple of spare oldies but goodies. In business.

Of course, I could have dragged one out of my office, or even taken one out of service on another computer, but this way, eeeeeverybody’s happy, no sweat, no hassle, no downtime. Easy-peasy.

And that, Mr. Dvorak, is why I keep piles of “junk” around: I never know when I will need a peripheral, some memory, a vidcard, whatever, and when I need it I do NOT need it after a trip to a store or a wait on UPS, I need it NOW. It might not be the latest and greatest, but if I can make it work and keep things up and running, it’s Good Enough for “right now”–and that’s the key ingredient.

Oh, and I never know when I might want to use an old (otherwise “useless”) piece of junk or three to build another firewall/router or a fileserver or some other one-purpose machine that can do with a 14″ monitor to set it up and an array of old SCSI drives and some slow memory and an otherwise useless 4MB PCI vidcard or whatever.

You just never know what neat lil niche toys can come out of a scrap parts bin. 🙂


Trackposted to The Pink Flamingo, Stuck On Stupid, The Bullwinkle Blog, The Random Yak, The Crazy Rants of Samantha Burns, and Maggie’s Notebook, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

SPAM, again

I awoke this a.m. to more than 1,000 comments/tbs in my SPAM queue.

Deleted. It’d make my eyes itch to skim through that many to find the one or two worthwhile comments/tbs experience has shown still get errorneously tagged as SPAM.

If you feel your comment/trackback has been erroneously tagged as SPAM and I’ve failed to resurrect it, do as Angel did today and leave me a comment letting me know. I’d hate to miss such posts as Angel’s LibAlert.

Of course, if your comment/trackback was tagged because of a SPAM-characteristic URL or mail addy, maybe sending me an email to let me know would work better. However you do let me know, be assured I’ll take a closer look and even hard code a link–as I just did for Angel’s trackbacked post–if need be.

Of course, I have manually tagged some comments held in my moderation queue (separate from the SPAM queue) as SPAM and deleted them, for various reasons. See my comment policy for possible reasons why I might manually delete/tag as SPAM any particular comment. My blog, my rules. Even if they do read like the tax code.

Wednesday OTA

THIS is an open trackbacks post. Link to THIS post and track back. 🙂

If you have a linkfest/open trackback post to promote OR if you simply want to promote a post via the linkfests/open trackback posts others are offering, GO TO LINKFEST HAVEN DELUXE! Just CLICK the link above or the graphic immediately below.

Linkfest Haven, the Blogger's Oasis

If you want to host your own linkfests but have not yet done so, check out the Open Trackbacks Alliance. The FAQ there is very helpful in understanding linkfests/open trackbacks.

O Blessed Holy Caffeine Tree!

The Random Yak posted a reminder recently that March is Caffeine Awareness Month, so I thought it’d be appropriate to note that here as well, and I’ll do so below the notice inviting y’all to participate in this post’s ancilliary function (linkfest!).

THIS is an open trackbacks post. Link to THIS post and track back. 🙂

If you have a linkfest/open trackback post to promote OR if you simply want to promote a post via the linkfests/open trackback posts others are offering, GO TO LINKFEST HAVEN DELUXE! Just CLICK the link above or the graphic immediately below.

Linkfest Haven, the Blogger's Oasis

If you want to host your own linkfests but have not yet done so, check out the Open Trackbacks Alliance. The FAQ there is very helpful in understanding linkfests/open trackbacks.

And now, with a tip o’ the hat to TRY for the CAW reminder, O Blessed Holy Caffeine Tree


Oh, and for another caffeine trip, try this article sent me in email by G.F.

History of Coffee: From Africa to Your Breakfast Table

And Christine’s Morning Coffee and Afternoon Tea has a wealth of coffee-related information, including her own rendition of O Blessed Holy Caffeine Tree (thanks, Christine!) and some interesting posts on roasting your own coffee.


Trackposted to Blog @ MoreWhat.com, Perri Nelson’s Website, The Virtuous Republic, Wake Up America, Adam’s Blog, basil’s blog, Walls of the City, Pirate’s Cove, Overtaken by Events, The Pink Flamingo, and Conservative Cat, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

Serving Time

Well, looks like no “mending walls” today. Maybe tomorrow. Funny thing though… Last month, I made sure all the computers here at twc central were patched for the DST change. Heck, even those computers running a version of Windoze that Me$$y$oft didn’t issue a patch for were “fixed” with tzedit.

But. Yesterday, computers here at twc central running Me$$y$oft OSes apparently did NOT change time. Well, they did, but they were also set to automatically check with internet timerservers for time checks and… none of the Windoze computers using the default timeservers were “changed” late last night or this a.m.

Hmmm… That’s weird. Fired up tzedit again and, yep, they are all set correctly as to when DST starts, but were still all giving the time at the old pre-DST times. Strange, eh?

Checked the default timeservers. Not. A. Single. One… had been updated.

Changed to some alternate (secondary) servers and… bingo! All updated, now.

Oh, how did Linux fare in DST updates, you ask? Slick as goose grease. Easy-peasy, lemon-squeezey.

Had better timeservers set by default. Of course. *heh*


Trackposted to stikNstein… has no mercy, Big Dog’s Weblog, The World According to Carl, and DragonLady’s World, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

Choices, choices… not so much.

Computer geeks are soooo amusing.

This a.m. I downloaded a “white paper” titled, “PDF or XPS: Choose the Right Document Format for your Applications” comparing the new Microsoft format offering to the venerable pdf format. Supposedly, according to the title and precis,

This white paper evaluates:

• The differences between PDF and XPS and advantages of each format.

• Best practices to create either one of these formats.

• Recommendations about which format to use in particular situations, such as:

Remote document printing
Document archival
Form filling/form based applications
Document exchange and collaboration

• Benchmark testing of PDF and XPS file size, speed and security.

XPS looks like a serious competitor to PDF. Developers will need to support two competing formats backed by two major players in the industry.

So, what format was the downloaded paper in?

PDF, of course.

*heh*


Trackposted to Blog @ MoreWhat.com, The Random Yak, Jo’s Cafe, Conservative Cat, and basil’s blog, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

Monday Linkfest

I’ll likely have a “Mending Walls” post–though likely a short one–up later today. Meanwhile, write your own twc post with this linkfest. Link to THIS post and track back. 🙂

If you have a linkfest/open trackback post to promote OR if you simply want to promote a post via the linkfests/open trackback posts others are offering, GO TO LINKFEST HAVEN DELUXE! Just CLICK the link above or the graphic immediately below.

Linkfest Haven, the Blogger's Oasis

If you want to host your own linkfests but have not yet done so, check out the Open Trackbacks Alliance. The FAQ there is very helpful in understanding linkfests/open trackbacks.

Anarcho-Tyranny: New Jersey Judge Channels Hitler

Since 1938, when Hitler banned it, homeschooling has been illegal in Germany, and, indeed, one German family is now suffering from a Nazi law still hanging around. When I posted about this before, I said,

Not here–yet!–but given the antipathy the “prisons for kids” system of public “education” has for homeschoolers (and the justifiable fear politicians and others have of citizens who can actually think), can it be far off?

Well, it’s not far off, and in fact, it is here, now.

New Jersey Judge Orders Penal Charges Against Mom for Home-Schooling

Why do I characterize the judge’s actions as “Hitlerian” (if not outright Nazi-like)? Well, do note that Hitler’s edict forbidding homeschooling was just that: an edict without legislated law. The judge in the New Jersey case specifically disparages New jersey statute law allowing honmeschooling and preventing state interference, and simp-ly issued an edict punishing the mother by requiring her to take actions the law does not allow the state to impose.

And he is getting away with this sort of high-handed “screw the law, I’ll do what I want” attitude/action because… ?

Tar. Feathers. Rope. Tree. Some assembly required. At least, that’s the nature (if not the exact) of response the colonists had when such high-handed, contra-legal actions were taken by a king usurping the People’s rights.

Add this one to the “long train of abuses” stacking up as normative for a governmental attitude that’s ever more abusive of its citizens… at every level of government.


Trackposted to Right Pundits, Outside the Beltway, The Virtuous Republic, A Blog For All, The Random Yak, 123beta, Adam’s Blog, basil’s blog, Shadowscope, Stuck On Stupid, The Bullwinkle Blog, Phastidio.net, The Amboy Times, Leaning Straight Up, The Florida Masochist, Conservative Cat, Conservative Thoughts, Pursuing Holiness, Rightlinx, Faultline USA, Woman Honor Thyself, stikNstein… has no mercy, , The World According to Carl, Pirate’s Cove, Overtaken by Events, The Right Nation, Blue Star Chronicles, The Pink Flamingo, Dumb Ox Daily News, and Right Voices, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.