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Posts from — August 2006

Energy Fiend » Death by Caffeine

Energy Fiend » Death by Caffeine:
Death by Caffeine
How much of your favorite caffeinated drink would it take to kill you? Take this quick test and find out:

August 19, 2006   No Comments

Rising college fees will cost us in time – Yahoo! News

Rising college fees will cost us in time – Yahoo! News:
• Many students work, sometimes multiple jobs, thereby losing much of the texture of the college experience.
Despite these well-documented struggles, tuition and fees keep rising.

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i worked up to 4 jobs, working is good, it adds texture to the college experience.

and fees keep rising because costs keep rising, and states and the fed are not keeping up with costs. it is much like ’stamps’ the cost to send mail goes up because the cost to run the post office increases. faculty get raises, inflation raises the cost of equipment, etc. all contribute to increased fees, as do.. and this will surprise some people. when more students that go to university or college, the cost generally increase, not decrease… because we have to build more buildings and provide more services.

August 19, 2006   No Comments

Monopoly Debit Card.

Monopoly Debit Card.:


Still playing with Monopoly money? That’s so, 2005. Now, you can play Monopoly with debit cards:

Game makers Parker have phased out the standard multi-coloured cash in a new version.

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this is just so wrong…..

August 18, 2006   No Comments

The One Man Advertising Campaign: 10 Reasons Gay Marriage is Wrong

The One Man Advertising Campaign: 10 Reasons Gay Marriage is Wrong:
10 Reasons Gay Marriage is Wrong

01. Being gay is not natural…..

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oh… that’s just the start of a concept. this really is worth reading.

August 18, 2006   No Comments

The CIA Cruelty Authorization Act of 2006

The CIA Cruelty Authorization Act of 2006:
There have been several reports in recent days about drafts of the Bush Administration’s proposed amendments to the War Crimes Act. Now, Slate has published a version of those amendments that reportedly was “sent to Congress” last week. I’m informed that this proposal was, at most, shared with a few Republicans on the Hill, and that it is not the final version. Assuming, however, that this amendment is fairly close to what we will eventually see from the Administration, it is, indeed, a very big deal—but not quite for the reasons that have thus far been stressed in most accounts.

Currently, the federal War Crimes Act provides for criminal sanctions (up to life imprisonment, or even death in extreme cases) for all violations of Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions.

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I really hope that the congress does not pass this. the recognition of war crimes and the debasement of humanity that is called torture is wrong, even if it does save tens of thousands of lives, because in the end, when you torture someone, and the nation is complicit, people realize their complicity and eventually come to terms with their own horror and the death of their own humanity.

August 16, 2006   No Comments

This looks like a great symposium

Information Law Institute:
Increasingly, who we are is represented by key bits of information scattered throughout the data-intensive, networked world. Online and off, these core identifiers mediate our sense of self, social interactions, movements through space, and access to goods and services. There is much at stake in designing systems of identification and identity management, deciding who or what will be in control of them, and building in adequate protection for our bits of identity permeating the network.
This symposium will examine critical and controversial issues surrounding socio-technical systems of identity, identifiability and identification. It will showcase emerging scholarship of graduate students at the cutting edge of humanities, social sciences, artists, systems design & engineering, philosophy, law, and policy to work towards a clearer understanding of these complex problems, and build foundations for future collaborative work.

August 15, 2006   No Comments

Nuclear war starting in 10 days? – Pravda.Ru

Nuclear war starting in 10 days? – Pravda.Ru:
Political Scientist’s Opinion

Alexander Prohanov, the main editor of ‘Zavtra’ Newspaper:’Apocalypse Tomorrow’

- The pulling of the trigger leading to the tragic chain of events has been done. Syria and Iran will be pulled into the war right after Lebanon. Israeli and American attacks on Iran will lead to the interruption of oil exports into Europe and China. Their economies will suffer. In the conclusion there will be chaos all across Asia.

The detonation device for the new apocalypse has been set off by Americans, obviously. They believe that they have the power and the authority to regulate the world’s chaos. But the U.S. cannot even gain control over its own minor chaos in Latin America. Let us only hope that Russia will remain neutral throughout this universal nightmare.

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yep, we aimed the gun and pull the trigger and looked the other way.

August 14, 2006   No Comments

cynicism

Times of Oman:
Maybe it was those explosive “liquid chemicals” they were planning to smuggle aboard the planes. After all, it’s only 160 years since nitroglycerin was invented. It’s a mere eleven years since Al Qaeda associate Ramzi Yousef plotted to blow up 12 airliners flying across the Pacific at the same time with nitro carried aboard in contact lens solution bottles. Who could have foreseen this? Quick! Bring in new security measures! They really aren’t that stupid. They have been checking liquids that people want to carry aboard flights at airport security checkpoints for years.

There would be no need for drastic new security measures even if the alleged British terrorist ring were still on the loose. This is all hype, designed to frighten the British and American publics into supporting the wars of their deeply unpopular governments (and the war of their Israeli ally as well). Or am I being too cynical? Maybe they’re just stupid. I really don’t know any more.

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the sad thing is that dyer is right and that the herd is still stampeding behind its manipulating leaders.

i certainly hope that no one believes that this makes them feel any safer… it does not make them safer.

August 13, 2006   2 Comments

Crooked Timber » » Flights of fancy

Crooked Timber » » Flights of fancy:
On reflection, maybe the ban on carry on luggage won’t be so bad: without a pc, let alone a phone, there need be no guilt about watching some movies on the seat-back video instead of working.
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I wonder if it might be worthwhile to think of these recent changes to flight rules as part of a larger cross-purpose war against cosmopolitanism. terrorism keeps people at home, the flight restrictions keep people at home. the lack of travel certain impinges upon peoples capacity to see the other as self in terms of worldliness….
Making the world more parochial, less worldly through these actions will have grave consequences for future generations. Parents will fear more for their children and that is a different kind of fear than the televisual terror theater. The cutting back on international travel and international education worries me more than than terror because by giving up the cosmopolitan perspective, we are confronted with the binarity of us vs them, which I think is already exacerbated by the whole idea of a ‘homeland’… The u.s. is not a homeland, it is a melting pot, it is where people come to be free. Nazi germany was a motherland/homeland. anyway, as you can tell i think the u.s. and the u.k. are manipulating their senses of nationalism in really problematic ways and I think one way to counter that is through travel, now they are making travel difficult, so what then can we do?

August 12, 2006   No Comments

Book Meme

Book Meme:

A book meme that’s going around. This is courtesy of Jonathan Sterne.

1. Chose the book closest to you at the moment.
2. Open to page 123
3. Find the 3rd sentence
4. Post in your blog (plus the instructions)
5. Don’t choose the book, just pick up the one closest to you.

You conceive of the social as the depletion of the emtpy form. Lotringer to Baudrillard in interview from Forget Foucault Semiotext(e)

the second closest book was

Above these waters Icarus can ignore the tricks of Daedalus in his shifting and endless labyrinths. Practices of Space by Michel De Certeau in On Signs by Blonsky.

August 12, 2006   No Comments