Thursday, December 6, 2012

Davids Daily Dose - Thursday December 6th




1/  There is lot's of political noise around now, but Paul Krugman sorts through the chaff - 

The President is not negotiating with himself again but is standing firm and waiting for some concrete proposals from the Republicans....and the fiscal cliff [more of a kerb] awaits.....

In the ongoing battle of the budget, President Obama has done something very cruel. Declaring that this time he won’t negotiate with himself, he has refused to lay out a proposal reflecting what he thinks Republicans want. Instead, he has demanded that Republicans themselves say, explicitly, what they want. And guess what: They can’t or won’t do it.

No, really. While there has been a lot of bluster from the G.O.P. about how we should reduce the deficit with spending cuts, not tax increases, no leading figures on the Republican side have been able or willing to specify what, exactly, they want to cut.
And there’s a reason for this reticence. The fact is that Republican posturing on the deficit has always been a con game, a play on the innumeracy of voters and reporters. Now Mr. Obama has demanded that the G.O.P. put up or shut up — and the response is an aggrieved mumble.


















2/  If you have any doubt at all that we live in a country dominated by predators, i.e. your average large corporation, have a look at this "60 Minutes" investigation into Health Management [HMA] hospitals.....they have over 20 hospitals in Florida, mostly in smaller towns, and hundreds of clinics here. If you end up in one of their facilities and they want to put you into the system for "tests"....don't do it! 

Hospitals: The cost of admission

December 2, 2012 4:42 PM
Steve Kroft investigates allegations from doctors that the hospital chain they worked for pressured them to admit patients regardless of their medical needs.

















3/  Every year Fox News ties itself into knots with the alleged "War On Christmas".......so Jon Stewart in an excellent 7 minute segment makes them look even more ridiculous than usual......and part 2 he can't believe Bill O'Reilly's argument about Christianity......

.......helped Fox News get an early start on its war on the War on Christmas tonight. Though as Stewart sadly observed, Fox’s annual battle to save Christmas have “become a little predictable” to the point where all you need is a book of Mad Libs and a bunch of religious buzzwords to set them off into a Christmas feeding frenzy.

http://www.mediaite.com/tv/jon-stewart-tears-into-fox-news-and-bill-o’reilly-for-outrage-over-the-war-on-christmas™/

















4/  The always insightful Frank Rich on the week's news, giving his take on the fiscal cliff and the state of the Republican Party........the smartest political writer we have.......

For anyone remotely interested in politics....

Every week, New York Magazine writer-at-large Frank Rich talks with assistant editor Eric Benson about the biggest stories in politics and culture. This week: the phony fiscal cliff countdown, Mike Bloomberg's chutzpah, and the Fox News doghouse.
The fiscal cliff talks are (surprise, surprise) at an impasse. President Obama has now rejected the GOP's latest uncompromising compromise and insisted that he won't make a deal unless tax rates on the top 2 percent rise. How do you see this standoff playing out?The breathless and phony countdown to the fiscal cliff — What if they can’t agree? What if we fall off? Can America possibly survive? — is media hype, a desperate effort to drum up a drama to keep viewers and readers tuned in now that the election is over. It’s aRoad Runner cartoon, Beltway-edition. And it’s going to end with a whimper like the similarly apocalyptic, now long-forgotten Y2K scare of the turn of the millennium. Everyone knows the Republicans are going to fold — the Republicans know they are going to fold — and the only question to be resolved is when and on what terms. They have zero leverage.


















5/  Queen Elizabeth is celebrating 60 years on the Throne of Britain, and this montage of pictures goes through her life in three minutes......she was a very pretty young woman, and has aged very well.....the cumulative effect of the slow fades gets a little creepy though..... 



















  Protecting yourself as a consumer

6/  Two very interesting stories about how the companies we all have to deal with are maximising their profits at our expense.....unless you know what they are up to......

The Haggler in the Times had a story two months ago about Staples, where they run specials but you can't buy them unless you also buy their service plan.....this is a follow-up....

But it's not just Staples - I went into Radio Shack for a wireless router [$38] and the clerk tried his best to get me to take out their service plan for about $5 a year for five years.....for a $38 router.....if you don't buy the plan you can't return the item they said over and over.....

IT’S been an eventful few months for Natasja Shah, a manager at a Staples store whom readers metin this space in September.
You may recall that she described the pressure that sales associates at Staples, the office supply chain, are under to sell warranties and accessories, particularly on computers. For motivation, close tabs are kept on the amount of extras and service plans sold for each and every computer. The goal is to sell an average of $200 worth of add-ons per machine, and a sales rep who can’t achieve that goal, Ms. Shah said, is at risk of termination.
This explained why customers reported some strange, seemingly anti-capitalist behavior at Staples stores: employees refusing to sell computers to customers who decline service plans. It’s a brushoff that Ms. Shah said was known among employees as “walking the customer,” because consumers are essentially shooed out the door empty-handed.













7/  When you go online to buy something the prices aren't fixed - they can fluctuate hourly or even faster.......
A good story about Amazon and how you need to stay alert......

The day before ThanksgivingAmazon was offering a discounted price of $49.96 on a popular Xbox game, the same price as Walmart and 3 cents lower than Target.

Then the holiday pricing shuffle began.
Amazon dropped its price on the game, Dance Central 3, to $24.99 on Thanksgiving Day, matching Best Buy’s “doorbuster” special, and went to $15 once Walmart stores offered the game at that lower price. Amazon then brought the price up, down, down again, up and up again — in all, seven price changes in seven days.
The unluckiest buyer paid more than triple the price that the luckiest buyer paid.
Retail price wars online have entered a new era of speed and precision, creating a confusing landscape for shoppers in which prices leap and plummet on short notice. In the old days, merchants sent employees into competitors’ stores to check on pricing, and days later “sale” signs reflected new markdowns. Now, sophisticated computer programs accomplish the same goal online within hours, and even minutes.














8/  "Shadows" by Lindsey Stirling.... unusual jazz violinist video, with a talented and pretty young musician competing with her shadow.......imaginative and unique.....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JGCsyshUU-A&feature=youtube_gdata_player











9/  A very good story on climate change from Dr. James Hansen, Director of NASA who speaks for almost all scientists worldwide who are extremely concerned about the future of our planet.....

All of the unusual weather we have been experiencing worldwide is caused by the temperature rise of 0.8 degrees C. over the last 30 years. With the changes in CO2 levels we have caused even if we implement every energy savings imaginable, the temperature over the next 50 years [or sooner] will still go up to a warming of 2 degrees C. What kind of extreme weather will we get? Noone knows, but it will get much worse than that because no government in the world is doing anything about global warming.....they are all cowed by the fossil fuel industries.....

Will our short attention span be the end of us? Just a month after the second "storm of a century" in two years, the media moves on to the latest scandal with barely a retrospective glance at the implications of the extreme climate anomalies we have seen.
Hurricane Sandy was not just a storm. It was a stark illustration of the power that climate change can deliver – today – to our doorsteps.
Ask the homeowners along the New Jersey and New York shores still homeless. Ask the local governments struggling weeks later to turn on power to their cold, darkened towns and cities. Ask the entire north-east coast, reeling from a catastrophe whose cost is estimated at $50bn and rising. (I am not brave enough to ask those who've lost husbands or wives, children or grandparents).
I bring up these facts sadly, as one who has urged us to heed the scientific evidence on climate change for the past 25 years. The science is clear: climate change is here, now.
Superstorm Sandy is not the first storm, and certainly won't be the last. Still, it is hard for us as individual human beings to connect the dots. That's where observation, data and scientific analysis help us see.
No credible scientist disputes that we have warmed our climate by almost 1.5C over land areas in the past century, most of that in the past 30 years.















10/  The British have an ironic sense of humour, as this one minute commercial from one of their government agencies shows......if you deny climate change you might go to prison.....

I'll be looking for this video to be posted on a right wing website of proof that the UN is coming! To take away our guns! Or something......

















11/  And speaking of the UN the Republicans voted down a UN treaty that spelled our how to treat people with disabilities......we have had these rules in place for 20 years, but the UN label freaks out the Republican base.....

Jon Stewart explains it all in a 3 minute segment.....

For the second day in a row, Jon Stewart hammered at Republicans over irrational partisanship. On Tuesday, he took down Boehner and company's indecent fiscal cliff proposal, and on Wednesday "The Daily Show" host took senate Republicans to task for voting against a United Nations treaty modeled after our own Americans With Disabilities Act.
"It's official. Republicans hate the United Nations more than they like helping people in wheelchairs."














12/  This is a 30 second commercial from Exxon - and they hate your kids......

















13/  Long article about how fracking could be affecting our food supply because of the contaminated water used in the fracking process. Cattle and other animals drink the water, and become sick and if they survive become part of the food supply....

Think about it - every gas well needs 700,000 gallons of water daily, more than the Niagara Bottling Company takes out of our aquifer every day. Yes - the US is becoming energy independent, but nothing's for free - we are putting our water resources and food supply at risk but there is minimal discussion about the consequences of continued drilling. The lobbyists for the fossil fuel industries see to that......

Good story, a little wordy but important.....

In a Brooklyn winery on a sultry July evening, an elegant crowd sips rosé and nibbles trout plucked from the gin-clear streams of upstate New York. The diners are here, with their checkbooks, to support a group called Chefs for the Marcellus, which works to protect the foodshed upon which hundreds of regional farm-to-fork restaurants depend. The foodshed is coincident with the Marcellus Shale, a geologic formation that arcs northeast from West Virginia through Pennsylvania and into New York State. As everyone invited here knows, the region is both agriculturally and energy rich, with vast quantities of natural gas sequestered deep below its fertile fields and forests. 

In Pennsylvania, the oil and gas industry is already on a tear—drilling thousands of feet into ancient seabeds, then repeatedly fracturing (or “fracking”) these wells with millions of gallons of highly pressurized, chemically laced water, which shatters the surrounding shale and releases fossil fuels. New York, meanwhile, is on its own natural-resource tear, with hundreds of newly opened breweries, wineries, organic dairies and pastured livestock operations—all of them capitalizing on the metropolitan area’s hunger to localize its diet.
But there’s growing evidence that these two impulses, toward energy and food independence, may be at odds with each other. 
Tonight’s guests have heard about residential drinking wells tainted by fracking fluids in Pennsylvania, Wyoming and Colorado. They’ve read about lingering rashes, nosebleeds and respiratory trauma in oil-patch communities, which are mostly rural, undeveloped, and lacking in political influence and economic prospects. The trout nibblers in the winery sympathize with the suffering of those communities. But their main concern tonight is a more insidious matter: the potential for drilling and fracking operations to contaminate our food. The early evidence from heavily fracked regions, especially from ranchers, is not reassuring. 
















14/  If you get to London this year this could be the restaurant you want to book - "Dinner By Heston" sounds like an amazing culinary experience. It is run by Heston Blumenthal who has a food show on British TV.....

This is a review of a meal at Hestons by a very gifted blogger who makes you feel you are actually there, experiencing the incredible food and the backstory of the restaurant. Note the article is written by my son John....

Excellent writing.......

This last week I have swum in both the deep and the shallow end of Heston Blumenthal’s pool. Lucky me, it was my birthday, and someone was kind enough to take me to Dinner by Heston, his restaurant at the Mandarin Oriental hotel in Knightsbridge, London. I also saw two and a half episodes of Heston’s Fantastical Food, his new ‘vehicle’ for Channel 4. It seemed like a good idea to talk about them together.
The restaurant itself is as modish and moneyed as you’d expect from a five star hotel sitting literally in the shadow of One Hyde Park, the most expensive property development in the UK. You enter through a bar filled with the sort of Prada-bedecked people I’d personally emigrate to avoid, but the restaurant itself, warm and beautifully lit, is bray-free. Dark wood and blown glass. We don’t get to overlook the fabled kitchen like some tables, but I’d take our spot again with its night view of the park. The concept behind Dinner by Heston is taking archaic British dishes, each one lovingly cookbook-dated on the menu, and celebrating and updating the ideas with pernickity attention to detail. As Matthew Fort said in a rave review in the Guardian, “Dinner reclaims and reinvents our own cooking heritage, reinvigorating the tired and ordinary orthodoxies of traditional British cooking.”
Unfortunately, the tired and ordinary orthodoxies of TV don’t come in for the same treatment. The high-concept elevator pitch behind H.F.F. is this: “Heston makes giant food.” That’s it. It’s window-dressed with his usual tropes of nostalgia, childhood flavours, and magical imagination, plus a parade of Roald Dalhl-ian silliness. But none of these quite support the premise or justify the means. “I’m going to expensively make an enormous thing, enlisting local people and food technologists up and down the land, and entertain the people doing so.” The giant fry up, the giant ice cream, the giant pot of tea. The ‘why’ is never really gotten to. And that’s the problem. There is no reason for this programme to exist. There is no good reason for the scale of the stunts – the glib explanations given aren’t even remotely convincing. The justifications – basically, that it will fire the imaginations of children – aren’t really borne out by the footage.

Back to Dinner. We skip the signature ‘meat fruit‘, a classic bit of Blumenthal legerdemain, and I go for Roast Marrowbone (c.1720) with snails, parsley, anchovy, mace & pickled vegetables, while my companion has the Rice & Flesh (c.1390) with saffron, calf tail and a red wine reduction. The marrow and snails are a little oily and samey for me but the Rice & Flesh is extraordinary; like a British risotto rippling with meaty unctuousness. Not remotely French, let alone Italian. We move on to the mains, and both decide to go for the Battalia Pye (c.1660), a barrel hoop crust filled with sweetbreads, lamb tongue, devilled kidneys and little pigeon legs, plus a little boat of the richest, densest lamb gravy ever devised by man. This is a potent celebration of meaty English flavours. You feel greedier with every mouthful. This is a pie, that most utterly Anglo-Saxon container. A pie filled with offal – which could similarly describe the sort of four-for-a-pound jobs you can get from Iceland – and yet it screams with flavour and texture and technique. It’s gloriously nostalgic and robust, and yet refined to perfection. It’s entirely Heston.














Todays video - from the Graham Norton show.....the funniest fart scene ever......he's so bad......















Todays romantic joke

A man and a woman were having a quiet, romantic dinner in a fine restaurant.

They were gazing lovingly at each other and holding hands.

The waitress, taking another order at a table a few steps away, suddenly noticed the man slowly sliding down his chair and under the table, but the woman acted unconcerned.

The waitress watched as the man slid all the way down his chair and out of sight under the table. Still, the woman appeared calm and unruffled, apparently unaware her dining companion had disappeared.

The waitress, thinking this was a bit too risqué behaviour that might offend other diners, went over to the table and tactfully, began by saying to the woman "Pardon me, ma’am, but I think your husband just slid under the table."

The woman calmly looked up at her and said, "No, he didn't. He just walked in the door."
--
.











Todays British joke

A devout Arab Muslim entered a black cab in London. He curtly asked the cabbie to turn off the radio because as decreed by his religious teaching, he must not listen to music because in the time of the prophet there was no music, especially Western music which is the music of the infidel. 

The cab driver politely switched off the radio, stopped the cab and opened the door. 

The Arab asked him, "What are you doing?  

"The cabbie answered, "In the time of the prophet there were no taxis, so fxxk off and wait for a camel!"











Todays Grandfather joke

A Loving Grandpa
A woman in a supermarket is following a grandfather and his badly behaved 3 year-old grandson. It's obvious to her that he has his hands full with the child screaming for sweets in the sweet aisle, cookies in the cookie aisle; and for fruit, cereal and pop in the other aisles. 

Meanwhile, Granddad is working his way around, saying in a controlled voice, "Easy, William, we won't be long, easy, boy."

Another outburst, and she hears the granddad calmly say, 
"It's okay, William, just a couple more minutes and we'll be out of here. Hang in there, boy."

At the checkout, the little terror is throwing items out of the cart, and Granddad says again in a controlled voice, 
"William, William, relax buddy, don't get upset. We'll be home in five minutes; stay cool, William."

Very impressed, the woman goes outside where the grandfather is loading his groceries and the boy into the car. She said to the elderly gentleman,

 "It's none of my business, but you were amazing in there. I don't know how you did it. That whole time, you kept your composure, and no matter how loud and disruptive he got, you just calmly kept saying things would be okay. William is very lucky to have you as his grandpa."

"Thanks," said the grandfather, "but I'm William .......the little fxxker's name is Jason."




Sunday, December 2, 2012

Davids Daily Dose - Sunday December 2nd





1/  "America is Not The Greatest Country in the World"........still powerful after two viewings.......his timing is exceptionally good......

Will McAvoy (Jeff Daniels) hits the nail straight on the head in the opening minutes on HBO's new series 'The Newsroom'. He is asked by a college student a simple question during a campus debate. 'What makes America the greatest country in the world?'. Daniels initially goes the politically correct route then at the last minute goes with a honest, bold, straight forward answer that sums up a lot of the worlds problems that so many are afraid to accept because we all want to believe in our system and that it is our system that works. The evidence that is out there today is to the contrary and he discloses such information in his argument. We used to be the worlds best of the best and now we are just pretending. The first step to solving a problem is to admit there is one.

















2/  A really, really funny ventriloquist routine, with a human dummy.....4 minutes.....yes, a rerun but still excellent.....

















3/  A good article from AlJazeera on the enema coming from the Obama administration that is being disguised as something that will be good for you - cuts to social programs. The polling is clear - this spending is overwhelmingly popular with both conservatives and liberals.....

Intelligent story for anyone interested in politics......and look at the commentary when race and class are put into the mix....

"Facts are stupid things," Ronald Reagan once said, hilariously misquoting Founding Father John Adams, your typical elitist Enlightenment intellectual, who actually said, "Facts are stubborn things, and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence." But in the contest between the real world of John Adams and the fantasy world bequeathed to us by Ronald Reagan, stupid and stubborn are on both on the side of the latter... and the latter is winning, hands down, as can be seen in President Obama's pursuit of a so-called "grand bargain" that would cut far more in spending than it would raise in taxes. In the Reaganite fantasy world of Washington DC, Obama represents the left. In the real world? Well, take a look for yourself.
There is a political party in the United States whose presidential candidate got over 60 million votes, and whose members - according to the General Social Survey - overwhelmingly think we're spending too little on Social Security, rather than spending too much, by a lopsided margin of 52-12. The party, of course, is the Republican Party.
There is as an ideological label claimed by over 100 million Americans, who collectively think we're spending too little on "improving and protecting the nation's health", rather than spending too much, by a 2-1 margin: 48-24.  The labelled ideology, of course, is conservative.
Combine the two categories and the two spending questions, and you find that a 51.4 percent of conservative Republicans think we're spending too little on either Social Security, health care or both. Only 28.7 percent think we're spending too much, and just 7.3 percent think we're spending too much on both.


















4/  Every now and then [OK every 6 months]  it does us all good to experience this powerful anti-drunk driving video from Australia........set to REM's "Everybody Hurts".....

Warning - this is very painful to watch.....


















5/  Long article from the Times about how the rising sea levels will affect our cities, including South Florida. The story states if we do everything we can to limit the rise in temperature to 2 Celsius, the seas will definitely rise five feet but they cannot say over what timeframe, but their conservative estimate is 2100. But if we do nothing and continue to pump CO2 into the atmosphere [which seems likely] this date will accelerate.

Note that a rise of 5 feet means the City of Miami Beach is gone, lower Manhattan is under water etc etc......click on the Multimedia tab on the left in the article to see the maps.....

Interesting stuff.....I wonder how long banks will keep giving mortgages to flood prone cities, and who will back the insurance policies needed? You guessed it - the taxpayers.....

One thing from Hurricane Sandy - I object to federal funds being given to rich people so they can rebuild their homes on the barrier islands and beaches.....

THE oceans have risen and fallen throughout Earth’s history, following the planet’s natural temperature cycles. Twenty thousand years ago, what is now New York City was at the edge of a giant ice sheet, and the sea was roughly 400 feet lower. But as the last ice age thawed, the sea rose to where it is today.
Now we are in a new warming phase, and the oceans are rising again after thousands of years of stability. As scientists who study sea level change and storm surge, we fear that Hurricane Sandy gave only a modest preview of the dangers to come, as we continue to power our global economy by burning fuels that pollute the air with heat-trapping gases.
This past summer, a disconcerting new scientific study by the climate scientist Michiel Schaeffer and colleagues — published in the journal Nature Climate Change — suggested that no matter how quickly we cut this pollution, we are unlikely to keep the seas from climbing less than five feet.
More than six million Americans live on land less than five feet above the local high tide. (Searchable maps and analyses are available at SurgingSeas.org for every low-lying coastal community in the contiguous United States.) Worse, rising seas raise the launching pad for storm surge, the thick wall of water that the wind can drive ahead of a storm. In a world with oceans that are five feet higher, our calculations show that New York City would average one flood as high as Hurricane Sandy’s about every 15 years, even without accounting for the stronger storms and bigger surges that are likely to result from warming.
Floods reaching five feet above the current high tide line will become increasingly common along the nation’s coastlines well before the seas climb by five feet. Over the last century, the nearly eight-inch rise of the world’s seas has already doubled the chance of “once in a century” floods for many seaside communities.

















6/  Sorry folks, but a commercial with zombies is definitely included in DDD......
It's Norwegian, been banned from primetime, doesn't make any sense at all but hell, it's got zombies! With golf clubs! 

Totally weird.....Yeehah!
















7/  Jon Stewart is back after the Thanksgiving break and this is a decent one......fiscal cliffitis.....7 minutes....

Congress is finding it very hard to come to any sort of reasonable compromise on the impending “fiscal cliff,” and tonight Jon Stewart laid into both sides for their unwillingness to seriously tackle the impending cuts and tax rate expirations that will trigger automatically by the December 31st deadline. Stewart hyped up the doom-and-gloom headlines over the cliff as a fiscal “cliffpocalypsemageddonacaust.

















8/  Climate change is truly off the radar and the disaster of Hurricane Sandy didn't seem to make any difference to the attitudes of Americans.....but what if the oligarchs have made the incredibly cynical decision to just let the earth warm up? If you have enough money you will be able to protect yourself......

I'm not quite ready to believe the premise of this story, but unless the elites at least start to discuss the problem I may start.....
What if the leaders of the United States -- and by leaders I mean the generals in the Pentagon, the corporate executives of the country’s largest enterprises, and the top officials in government -- have secretly concluded that while world-wide climate change is indeed going to be catastrophic, the US, or more broadly speaking, North America, is fortuitously situated to come out on top in the resulting global struggle for survival?
I’m not by nature a conspiracy theorist, but this horrifying thought came to me yesterday as I batted away yet another round of ignorant rants from people who insist against all logic that climate change is a gigantic fraud being perpetrated, variously, by a conspiracy of the oil companies who allegedly want to benefit from carbon credit trading, the scientific community, which allegedly is collectively selling out and participating in some world-wide system of omerta in order to get grants, or the world socialist conspiracy, which of course, is trying to destroy capitalism), or all the above. (God, whenever I write anything on climate change these people hit me with flame-mail like mayflies spattering a car windshield in mating season!)
What prompted me to this dark speculation about an American conspiracy of inaction was the seemingly incomprehensible failure of the US -- in the face of overwhelming evidence that the Earth is heating up at an accelerating rate, and that we are in danger of soon reaching a point of no return where the process feeds itself -- to do anything to reduce either this country’s annual production of more atmospheric CO2, or to promote some broader international agreement to slow the production of greenhouse gases.
http://www.nationofchange.org/thinking-unthinkable-what-if-america-s-leaders-actually-want-catastrophic-climate-change-1354173289

















9/  "You're Doing It Wrong" collection of fails.....this is an amusing PG version of the TwisterNederland fails......comfortable for the ladies, i.e. noone gets seriously hurt!  - 6 minutes.....















10/  Most interesting essay from a reporter who visited the American West during the severe heat and drought that was this summer from hell.....and the drought continues. 

No special message, just good writing and descriptive reporting....brings the central and western states alive with human stories........

Will the West Survive?

This year, summer came on like a grudge, with record-breaking heat, inescapable drought, and the sense that the effects of climate change had arrived – and that life in America's mythic frontier might never be the same.

Something looked off when I landed at Denver International Airport this past August. It had been about four years since my last visit, and I couldn't immediately put my finger on what was up. I bought a coffee, glanced at the 'Denver Post,' and wandered out into the main terminal, with its silly bedouin design, the domed white ceiling looking as flimsy and tarplike as ever. It wasn't until I was outside, riding in the shuttle bus to my rental car, that it struck me what had changed: The Rocky Mountains had vanished.
"Oh, yeah," the shuttle-bus driver confirmed. "We haven't been able to see them from the airport for about a month." Colorado had been experiencing its hottest summer on record. In Denver, temperatures would hit 90 degrees or higher on 73 days, shattering the previous record of 61 days set in 2000. (The summer average over the past 30 years has been only 33 days.) Haze from the heat, along with lingering smoke from the wildfires that had been ravaging much of the West – including the 18,000-acre Waldo Canyon fire in Colorado Springs – had conspired to erase metropolitan Denver's spectacular horizon. If you squinted and the light was just right, you could make out faint outlines of the Rockies' Front Range, looking like a tentative art-school etching, begun and then inexplicably abandoned.
Record-breaking heat waves, a fire season run amok, sustained levels of drought unseen since the Dust Bowl of the 1930s: Throughout the summer of 2012, the weather came on like a grudge, as spiteful and relentless as an Old Testament plague. It was the hottest July ever in the United States, and the third-hottest summer in the history of the country. By September, 7 million acres had burned across the U.S.: 600,000 acres in Nevada; 144,000 in Idaho; 650,000 in Montana. The record for worst fire year in U.S. history had only just been set in 2006 (9.8 million acres burned), but it's likely that 2012 will surpass that number. In July, in Guthrie, Oklahoma, thermometers hit 114 degrees, breaking the previous record set in 1896. By August, 63 percent of the country was experiencing drought conditions, drying up wells across the Midwest. On a Navajo reservation in New Mexico, feral horses started dropping dead; horse-rescue organizations around the country couldn't handle the spike in business. Down in Texas, where the previous summer's drought had prompted an unprecedented cattle drive north – thinning the state's 5-million-head herd by 12 percent – an unusually mild winter (even by Texas standards) had allowed plague-carrying mosquitoes to survive and flourish, resulting in an outbreak of West Nile virus that killed at least 77 people.

















11/  Music video - DDD favourite "Could You Believe" by ATB [Andre Tanneberger].....this breakout hit has a lot - great song, naughty lesbian girls, a German stalker and it's in crisp, clear 1080......

It's also interesting in that the video is completely disconnected from the lyrics.....it's like he [ATB] said "just make a cool video and we'll stick this great song with it".....however, works for me.....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9rH1kT8EIOU

















12/  In case you missed it something big happened in the election - two states legalised marijuana, but there is an issue with conflicting laws - it may be legal in Colorado and Washington, but under federal law weed is still verboten.......

SEATTLE – In two weeks, adults in this state will no longer be arrested or incarcerated for something that nearly 30 million Americans did last year. For the first time since prohibition began 75 years ago, recreational marijuana use will be legal; the misery-inducing crusade to lock up thousands of ordinary people has at last been seen, by a majority of voters in this state and in Colorado, for what it is: a monumental failure.
That is, unless the Obama administration steps in with an injunction, as it has threatened to in the past, against common sense. For what stands between ending this absurd front in the dead-ender war on drugs and the status quo is the federal government. It could intervene, citing the supremacy of federal law that still classifies marijuana as a dangerous drug.
But it shouldn’t. Social revolutions in a democracy, especially ones that begin with voters, should not be lightly dismissed. Forget all the lame jokes about Cheetos and Cheech and Chong. In the two-and-a-half weeks since a pair of progressive Western states sent a message that arresting 853,000 people a year for marijuana offenses is an insult to a country built on individual freedom, a whiff of positive, even monumental change is in the air.


















13/  You may have read about the completely bogus controversy around Susan Rice [generated by the Senator Dementia [John McCain and his pals at Fox News], who may be in line for Secretary of State to replace Hilary Clinton.....but did you know she is a rich woman with significant investments in Canadian oil companies, who may be called to rule on the Keystone Pipeline? Not quite in the Romney class of wealth, but doing very well thank you at $40 million......
Most of the attacks against Susan Rice, Obama’s supposed top pick for Secretary of State, have come from Republicans. But now the left — mainly groups opposed to developing Canadian tar sands — may have some reasons to question Rice.
According to a report from OnEarth Magazine, Rice has millions of dollars tied up in top Canadian energy companies — including TransCanada, the company pushing for the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline.
The 1,700 mile Keystone XL pipeline would pipe carbon-intensive tar sands crude from Alberta to refineries in the Gulf of Mexico. Because the pipeline crosses international borders, its approval falls under the jurisdiction of the State Department. That means Rice — or any other candidate tapped to head the State Department — would be responsible for approving or rejecting the project.
Here’s what the OnEarth investigation of Rice’s finances found:
Rice’s financial holdings could raise questions about her status as a neutral decision maker. The current U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Rice owns stock valued between $300,000 and $600,000 in TransCanada, the company seeking a federal permit to transport tar sands crude 1,700 miles to refineries on the Texas Gulf Coast, crossing fragile Midwest ecosystems and the largest freshwater aquifer in North America.




















14/  Stephen Colbert with one of my favourite segments "The Word".....very clever, and of course the topic is Fox News....

Ladies, we have a problem.
According to "How To Choose A Husband" author Suzanne Venker's recent FoxNews.com article, "The War On Men,"all that progress the gender has made over the last 50 years is causing men to lose interest in marriage. Her solution? It's time for women to "surrender to their nature" and let men pick up the slack in the workplace, because how are men supposed to provide and care for you if you're too busy achieving your goals and seeking equal pay?

















15/  Two movies you won't see in theaters but might be worth putting on your Netflix queue.......


"Chasing Ice" is a documentary by James Balog, photographing glaciers over a multi-year span to see how they are being affected by climate change.....beautiful photography......and a good review from the LA Times.....
A sharp mix of portrait doc, landscape film and pointed activism, "Chasing Ice" centers on environmental photographer James Balog and his committed efforts to document climate change.
Directed by Jeff Orlowski, the film follows Balog as he sets up cameras in Greenland, Iceland, Alaska and Montana to use time-lapse imagery to chronicle shrinking glaciers for his Extreme Ice Survey. The sheer scale of the glaciers, some as tall as skyscrapers and as big as Manhattan, is difficult to comprehend, as are the efforts of Balog and his team to access them.
That the natural formations Balog photographs are, as he puts it, "insanely, ridiculously beautiful" certainly doesn't hurt Orlowski's film, as the staggering, otherworldly images from the genuine ends of the earth are things most of us will never see up close.



Interesting trailer......












"Beware of Mr. Baker" - a documentary on the life of Ginger Baker, the larger than life member of the band "Cream", who some say is the best drummer of all time.....



Great trailer.....a complete madman, but an amazing drummer......

















Todays video - the classic tipping scene from Quentin Tarantino's "Reservoir Dogs", where Steve Buscemi's character is taken to task for his philosophy on gratuties.......

Warning - since this is a cinematic scene involving criminals, the language is very salty......
















Todays Old Lady joke

An elderly lady was invited to an old friend's home for dinner one
evening. 

She was impressed by the way her lady friend preceded every
request to her husband with endearing terms such as: Honey, My Love,
Darling, Sweetheart, etc. The couple had been married almost 70 years
and, clearly, they were still very much in love. 

While the husband was in the living room, her lady friend leaned over to her hostess to say,
'I think it's wonderful that, after all these years, you still call
your husband all those loving names.'
The elderly lady hung her head, 'I have to tell you the truth,' she said, 'his name slipped my
mind about 10 years ago, and I'm scared to death to ask the cranky old
asshole what his name is.'*













Todays biker joke
A duded-up city rider walks into a seedy tavern in Sturgis, South Dakota.
He sits at the bar and notices a grizzled old biker with his arms folded,
staring blankly at a full bowl of chili.

After fifteen minutes of just sitting there staring at it, the newby
rider bravely asks the old biker, 'If you ain't gonna eat that, mind
if I do?'

The old veteran of a thousand rides slowly turns his head toward the
young pup and says, 'Nah, you go ahead.' ...

Eagerly, the guy wearing the shiny new leather fashions reaches over
and slides the bowl into his place and starts spooning it in with
delight. He gets nearly down to the bottom of the bowl and notices a
dead mouse in the chilli. The sight was very shocking and he
immediately barfed up the chili back into the bowl.

The old biker quietly says, 'Yep, that's as far as I got, too.'









Todays senior joke

The husband leans over and asks his wife, "Do you remember
the first time we had sex together over fifty years ago? We
went behind the village tavern where you leaned against the
back fence and I made love to you."

Yes, she says, "I remember it well."

OK, he says, "How about taking a stroll around there again and
we can do it for old time's sake?"

"Oh Jim, you old devil, that sounds like a crazy, but good idea!"

A police officer sitting in the next booth heard their conversation
and, having a chuckle to himself, he thinks to himself, I've got to
see these two old-timers having sex against a fence. I'll just keep
an eye on them so there's no trouble. So he follows them.

The elderly couple walks haltingly along, leaning on each other for support aided by walking sticks. Finally, they get to the back of the tavern and make their way to the fence The old lady lifts her skirt and the old man drops his trousers. As she leans against the fence, the old man moves in.. Then suddenly they erupt into the most furious sex that the policeman has ever seen. This goes on for about ten minutes while both are making loud noises and moaning and screaming. Finally, they both collapse, panting on the ground.

The policeman is amazed. He thinks he has learned something about life and old age that he didn't know.

After about half an hour of lying on the ground recovering, the old couple struggle to their feet and put their clothes back on. The policeman, is still watching and thinks to himself, this is truly amazing, I've got to ask them what their secret is.

So, as the couple passes, he says to them, "Excuse me, but that
was something else. You must've had a fantastic sex life together.
Is there some sort of secret to this?"
Shaking, the old man is barely able to reply,

"Fifty years ago that wasn't an electric fence."