Monthly Archives: February 2006

Kibo Has a Web Page

I am probably the last to know this but I’ve only just discovered that Kibo, the founder of Kibology, has a web site, entitled, of course, Kibo : Kibo’s official site.

Oldtimers will recall Kibo from Usenet; back in the day he was something between a net.legend and a net.kook. I thought he was funny, most of the time. I even corresponded with the guy once, way back when.

Posted in Internet | 3 Comments

Timing Is Everything

Ted Kennedy reported the Chappaquiddick accident a full eight hours after it happened, and has never entirely lived it down.

How long did Cheney wait before informing the local police? It’s unclear, although presumably the closed-mouthed Secret Service knew right away. But Cheney did wait almost 24 hours before telling anyone else, and the media strategy screams cover-up. Not that we yet know a single fact that would have been worth covering up, do we?

Bonus jokes — I think they are jokes — here and here.

I suppose it distracts from Iraq, the economy, Plame, New Orleans, the deficit, Abramoff, and all the rest of it.

Posted in Politics: The Party of Sleaze | 7 Comments

Alien & Sedition Acts Redux?

Ann Bartow points to this very odd and worrying incident: VA Nurse Investigated for ‘Sedition’ for Criticizing Bush:

Laura Berg is a clinical nurse specialist at the VA Medical Center in Albuquerque, where she has worked for 15 years.

Shortly after Katrina, she wrote a letter to the editor of the weekly paper the Alibi criticizing the Bush Administration.

After the paper published the letter in its September 15-21 issue, VA administrators seized her computer, alleged that she had written the letter on that computer, and accused her of “sedition.”

That’s right: writing a letter to the editor accusing the administration of “criminal negligence” gets you investigated for sedition in today’s USA.

Posted in Civil Liberties | 1 Comment

Two Neat Things I Learned from Ed Bott

Two neat things I’ve learned from Ed Bott recently:

  1. What refresh rate should you use with an LCD monitor?
  2. In private e-mail Ed pointed me to Openwide:

    OpenWide was written to avoid a few [more] minor annoyances with Windows. This program allows you to specify the position and size of Windows’ Open and Save dialog boxes, and also to specify where the initial focus should be and which view will be the default.

  3. So far it works flawlessly and fixes one the most frustrating features of Windows.

Thanks Ed!

Posted in Sufficiently Advanced Technology | 1 Comment

Annals of Mind Control

Via Slashdot comes news that Mind Control Parasites in Half of All Humans:

According to a Yahoo News story, half of the world’s human population is infected with Toxoplasma, a parasite shown to alter the brain function of rats, inducing them into behavior that benefits the parasite but is suicidal for the rat. So what affect does it have on humans?

The research is by Dr. E. Fuller Torrey — a name of some controversy for his earlier research in schizophrenia — so it’s not surprising that he suggests there may be a link to it. (According to the Wikipedia article linked above, Dr. Torrey “told The New York Daily News his wife thinks he is going to be assassinated by cat lovers.”)

Myself, I’d like to see a whole set of correlations of Toxoplasma infection to various behaviors, such as spending, eating, and — why not? — voting…

Posted in Science/Medicine | 4 Comments

Historical Parallels and the Cheney Shotgun

Probably the best historical parallel for Vice President Cheney’s shotgun accident while quail hunting is Talking Point Memo’s remark that,

Dick Cheney now joins Aaron Burr as one of the two vice presidents to shoot someone while in office. Are we leaving anyone out?

That said, questions swirl around the incident, including just how severe the injuries are, and why the Veep’s office waited 24 hours to acknowledge the incident.

TalkLeft has some background on the legal issues. It appears lawyers were not in season…

Posted in Politics: The Party of Sleaze | 4 Comments