Why Motorhead Rocks Your Hole, Reason #82
Because of this totally badass logo:

I don't know what it is, but it's totally sick. It's like a malevolent boar or something. Plus it has "England", which kicks ass. You know it rocks your hole.
Because of this totally badass logo:

I don't know what it is, but it's totally sick. It's like a malevolent boar or something. Plus it has "England", which kicks ass. You know it rocks your hole.
(Apropos all the sanctimonious sites that tell me I'm using a crappy browser and should "upgrade" to Firefox)
Any chance they'll now shut their damned cake-holes?
Oh well, even if they don't, Firefox clearly isn't "all that" - as a substitute for whatever else one might use, it's uninspiring, just as uninspiring as considering a switch in the other direction, e.g. to Internet Exploder. At least IE doesn't stake some claim to moral superiority, other than, well, by just working a bit better.
In case you're curious, a transcript of the final moments of Flight 93 is available over at the Smoking Gun.
This lyric, from the track, "Killed by Death":
"If you squeeze my lizard, I'll put my snake right on you"
Princess Cat, over at A Swift Kick and a Bandaid, has an open letter for the immigrant protesters that infested our nation's capital the other day.
You see, I noticed you and your clan... and now I hate you ... because it took me an hour and a half to get home today. I watched as train after train, car after car of smug, arrogant, antagonistic protestors waved and taunted those waiting on the platform. You purposely targeted and inconvenienced me during my evening commute, because you thought it would make me contact my Congressman or Senator on your behalf? Isn't there some story about flies and honey that you should be learning right about now?
And while you're at it, go ask Apu why la migra isn't trying to nail his ass to the wall and maybe then you'll learn why he didn't have to protest for his rights.
Sincerely,
The Bitch from the Metro
We had a chat about this yesterday, and I find myself largely in agreement. My commute was made double-plus unpleasant by an El Salvadoran in a floppy hat who had failed to execute an adequate personal hygiene regimen any time in the last week. The protestors on their way home were largely as Cat describes them.
A coworker of mine, a liberal, found to his surprise that he and I agreed completely on the issue. We established that we both believe that anyone who protests on this issue is a complete fathead, or worse. The worst sin here is the conflation of two issues: immigration and illegal immigration.
I am all for immigration, of the legal, above board and it least somewhat competantly monitored sort. I think we should reduce limitations on skilled workers from nearly anywhere. We should streamline the process for getting visas - to make it simpler, and with less bureaucratic hassle. We should implement something like the sojourner idea that Bennett had, to make it much, much easier for people from Canada, New Zealand, Australia, Ireland and Great Britain to come, work, and stay here.
That is one issue. A completely separate issue is the people breaking and entering our national bungalo. The first thing they do when they come here is flout our laws and, in essence, give us the finger. Illegal immigrants do not have the same rights as citizens, or legal aliens. If found, they should be deported. Their employers should be heavily fined. We should stiffen the defenses on the border. Put more agents out patrolling.
Any other reaction is simply ridiculous. Illegal is illegal. Anyone who uses the phrase "undocumented worker" is blowing smoke up our collective ass. Anyone who tries to color everyone who opposes illegal immigration as a bigot is a fucktard. I'm tired of people in the administration and congress not dealing with this problem in anything even approaching a reasonable manner.
Bleh.
In a fascinating series of posts about a spur-of-the-moment road trip - "Hey dude... we're in Turkey... let's drive to Iraq" - Michael Totten says what needs to be said about all the trouble in the world today. Arguing that Islamism only seems like the biggest problem in the Middle East, when it's really only that Islamism is its biggest export (which I guess is kind of like summing up the Japanese by pointing to a Camry), he says with great insight that the real problem is that:
The crackup of the Ottoman Empire has still not settled down into anything stable.
Maybe it's just because I am currently reading an excellent book about the crackup of another ancient civilization - Europe - in Tony Judt's magesterial Postwar but that strikes me as being right on the nose. That area of the world is currently going through its own Twentieth Century, made worse by the fact that it's also living with the cast-off aftermath of Europe's own Twentieth. The near-simultaneous collapse of Austro-Hungary, Russia, Prussia/Germany, not to mention the last of the Mongol monarchs (in Azerbaijan and, I believe, Armenia) and a bunch of other upheavals (Italy, Spain...) gave us two horrific wars, Fascism, Communism in all its multifarious splendors, numerous genocides, and a resulting body count in the high tens of millions, if not higher. Not to mention the disastrous aftermath of messy colonial withdrawals around the world as Europe bled itself white. All because of some some silly little empires.
Anyway. No point to that. Why should there be? This is a weblog! Read Michael Totten's road trip series - here's part one, which links at the end to part two.
Italian police arrest the grand poobah of the international La Cosa Nostra in Sicily. In Corleone. I mean, didn't the guy watch the Godfather?
Well, not really. But the European Space Agency's Venus Express probe appears to have made orbit around our toasty sister planet, and will begin its two-day mission to, well, probe, the secrets hidden behind the ever present clouds. In case you're wondering why the mission is so short, that's Venusian days, which are about five hundred times longer than our pathetic Earth days.
Pretty cool, as this is the first mission to Venus for the Europeans, and the first mission at all in over a decade.
My son told me a story this morning. I took a break from disinfecting my computer and acted as scribe for young Hemingway:
Once upon a time, a sleeping dragon in a cave dreamt of scaring people. When he woke, the dragon (whose name was Dragon) slithered to John's house. There, he asked if John could come out and play. So John and Dragon went into the backyard and played in the sandbox.
The End
My mom, bless her heart, sent me the following via the internets. No doubt you've seen things like this before. Maybe even this one. Your relatives back home probably sent you one. But fear of repetition has never held back the Ministry. Never. If we give into fear, then the terrorists will have won. And you don't want that, do you? Do you?
So here it is. The top arbitrary number of reasons you will know you are from Cleveland (with commentary, thusly):