Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Huckabee's Theocratic Agenda
Mike Huckabee is showing his true colors. This pandering theocrat wants to toss out the separation of state and church, replacing it with an altered U.S. Constitution that enshrines his view of God's standards as the law of the land. He wants to amend it to line the Constitution with the Bible, and obviously is isn't the Catholic or Mormon perspective of that tome.
What theocrats and theocons like the Huckster don't seem to realize is that there is no freedom of religion without freedom from religion. The two go hand in hand, by way of the establishment and free exercise clauses of the First Amendment. This shyster baptist preacher in politicians clothing needs to be kicked to the curb, hard and fast! People like him are not interested in having the freedom to worship as their conscience dictates. No, Huckabee and his followers will not be satisfied until they can dictate that we all follow their religion, or else become second class citizens in our own country.
Huckabee, if you love theocracy, may I suggest you run for President of Iran. You and Ahmadinejad are cut from the same cloth, and it is a moldy, foul, and mildewed cloth at that! You two would get along very well.
Sunday, January 13, 2008
CES Redux
As I mentioned in an earlier post, I didn't get much time to wander around CES while working there last week, but from what I did see, I have to somewhat agree with Leo Laporte's assessment, where he called it the Craptastic Electronics Show. Leo thinks it could be following Comdex into history. Given what I saw, I think he is onto something here.
Putting Hillary in Context
I have made no secret of my dislike for President Bush's policies and unconstitutional attacks on our liberty. Yet, I cannot give unconditional support for any Democratic candidate to replace him either. I was, quite frankly, sickened by the weasely waffling and failure to take any responsibility for her own voting record, by Senator Hillary Clinton on today's broadcast of NBC's Meet The Press. Everytime host Tim Russert would call Hillary on some of her votes or speeches made back in 2002 when she voted to give Bush authority to invade Iraq, she would cry "context". Senator Clinton, with all due respect, you cannot context away your record. You ask us to vote for you because of your experience and record, yet every time some of your record makes you uncomfortable, you cite context. In fact, during the MTP broadcast, Hillary did this six times! Look at the transcript:
Also, Hillary is running on her "35 years of experience". She is a U.S. Senator who has been in office for not quite 8 years. She has 20 years experience of being either the First Lady of Arkansas or the First Lady of the United States; hardly relevant political experience. Where does she figure this 35 years? No doubt, she is a smart woman, but she overstates her experience and runs from her record. Look at what she said when Russert pressed on about her vote to give Bush war powers:
In other words, "Let's not talk about my record, Tim." I am all for a woman as President of the United States. Hillary just isn't my choice. It is my belief that the Democrats, and the nation, would be best served if the junior U.S. Senator from New York would drop out of the race. As that isn't likely that will happen any time soon, it is therefore time for Democrats to smack her down at every primary and caucus in this year's presidential campaign. If she becomes the nominee, I will be very disappointed, as I cannot vote for any of the Republicans, and I think Hillary is a politician who wavers with the political wind. I hope that isn't the choice remaining when it's all said and done.
I understand the taking out of context and the mischaracterization.
Well, Tim, let's put this in context.
Let's look at the entire context.
. . .let's look at the context here.
Now, I think it's important to take a look at the entire context here.
But you know, Tim, I think that it's only fair to look at the entire context . . .
Also, Hillary is running on her "35 years of experience". She is a U.S. Senator who has been in office for not quite 8 years. She has 20 years experience of being either the First Lady of Arkansas or the First Lady of the United States; hardly relevant political experience. Where does she figure this 35 years? No doubt, she is a smart woman, but she overstates her experience and runs from her record. Look at what she said when Russert pressed on about her vote to give Bush war powers:
Now, we can sit here and argue about 2002 or we can say what has happened since and what needs to happen going forward in the future.
In other words, "Let's not talk about my record, Tim." I am all for a woman as President of the United States. Hillary just isn't my choice. It is my belief that the Democrats, and the nation, would be best served if the junior U.S. Senator from New York would drop out of the race. As that isn't likely that will happen any time soon, it is therefore time for Democrats to smack her down at every primary and caucus in this year's presidential campaign. If she becomes the nominee, I will be very disappointed, as I cannot vote for any of the Republicans, and I think Hillary is a politician who wavers with the political wind. I hope that isn't the choice remaining when it's all said and done.
Sunday Morning at the Stock Show

This week, one of the largest rodeo and stock shows in the United States is making its annual stop in Denver. The National Western Stock Show comes to town every January, with its array of livestock. Roosters, hogs, goats, steers, llamas, horses and many other animals are all there to compete, along with their owners. I had a couple of hours to kill, so this morning the lovely spouse and I made the trip to the National Western Complex to take a look.
One of the events today is the Colorado Fiddle Championship competition. Yesterday, a number of fiddlers were eliminated, and the winners of that contest compete today in the finals. The first entertainment was a group of talented fiddling kids known collectively as Fiddleocity. They ranged in age from five years old to early teens. These kids are learning by the Suzuki method, and play both fiddle and guitar, so they can play accompaniment for one another.

Fiddleocity on stage
It was interesting that the only boy in the group was the five year old. The youngest girl was eight. Quite a good bunch of kids, and the talents they are developing will enrich their lives for years to come. I imagine they will always remember performing at the National Western Complex.

Some of the kids - Click any picture for a larger version
Before the adult competition starts up in the afternoon, the judges come onto the stage to display their musical abilities. Each took a turn on both fiddle and guitar, and played some rousing "hoe-down" music and western swing. Quite entertaining.

The judges pickin' and sawin' out a tune
Outside the main building, the food vendors had everything from turkey legs to fried Twinkies for sale. Here is a man working to grill turkey and chicken for the hungry masses.

Cooking up a tasty treat!
As the rodeo competition doesn't begin until later in the day, we didn't stick around for it, but we did notice the preparation going on in the main arena. The barrel races, cattle roping, and steer riding will be going on before you know it!

Prepping the rodeo arena
While waiting for the riding to begin, what cowboy doesn't need a bit of food to keep up his strength? I caught this young cowboy trying out


Sunday Morning at the Stock Show

This week, one of the largest rodeo and stock shows in the United States is making its annual stop in Denver. The National Western Stock Show comes to town every January, with its array of livestock. Roosters, hogs, goats, steers, llamas, horses and many other animals are all there to compete, along with their owners. I had a couple of hours to kill, so this morning the lovely spouse and I made the trip to the National Western Complex to take a look.
One of the events today is the Colorado Fiddle Championship competition. Yesterday, a number of fiddlers were eliminated, and the winners of that contest compete today in the finals. The first entertainment was a group of talented fiddling kids known collectively as Fiddleocity. They ranged in age from five years old to early teens. These kids are learning by the Suzuki method, and play both fiddle and guitar, so they can play accompaniment for one another.

Fiddleocity on stage
It was interesting that the only boy in the group was the five year old. The youngest girl was eight. Quite a good bunch of kids, and the talents they are developing will enrich their lives for years to come. I imagine they will always remember performing at the National Western Complex.

Some of the kids - Click any picture for a larger version
Before the adult competition starts up in the afternoon, the judges come onto the stage to display their musical abilities. Each took a turn on both fiddle and guitar, and played some rousing "hoe-down" music and western swing. Quite entertaining.

The judges pickin' and sawin' out a tune
Outside the main building, the food vendors had everything from turkey legs to fried Twinkies for sale. Here is a man working to grill turkey and chicken for the hungry masses.

Cooking up a tasty treat!
As the rodeo competition doesn't begin until later in the day, we didn't stick around for it, but we did notice the preparation going on in the main arena. The barrel races, cattle roping, and steer riding will be going on before you know it!

Prepping the rodeo arena
While waiting for the riding to begin, what cowboy doesn't need a bit of food to keep up his strength? I caught this young cowboy contemplating the competition ahead and admiring a corn dog before biting into it.

Git a long little corn doggie!
It's not just the cowboys that are awaiting their turn in the arena. The horses are also standing by, ready to show off their best stuff!

Put on a good show, but DON'T break a leg. They'll shoot you!
As we depart, we are reminded by this friendly hog that it all happens again next year!
Saturday, January 12, 2008
Old DeSoto

An old DeSoto - photo taken with cell phone camera
Last week I pulled into the parking lot of the new Best Buy store in Parker and saw this rare sight. It is a late 1950s DeSoto, a now defunct brand of Chrysler (which has been joined in extinction by its sibling, Plymouth). This is either a '56, '57, or '58 model, but I don't know for sure, since there were subtle differences that I am not aware of. Also, that was the era when huge tail fins were all in vogue. In any case, this one is a little rusty, but is a prime candidate for a restoration. Given how it is parked in several spaces, I imagine the owner has that very thing in mind.
DeSoto always reminds me of the old TV show, You Bet Your Life, starring the late Groucho Marx. One of its sponsors was DeSoto, as seen in the clip below.
So many brands of that era are gone. Studebaker, Rambler, and more recently Plymouth and Oldsmobile. With Toyota passing Ford as the #2 brand in the U.S. you have to wonder how many more will be gone soon. Prime candidates would seem to be Mercury, Pontiac, and perhaps even Buick and Dodge. Time will tell.
Friday, January 11, 2008
Back From CES 2008
Every year, the largest trade show for electronics takes place in Las Vegas, Nevada. The Consumer Electronics Show or CES proves that what happens in Vegas doesn't always stay in Vegas. The electronic gadgets and innovations that are shown at CES make their way into homes and offices around the world. I have long wanted to attend CES, and this is the year I finally got to do it. However, since I was there to help staff my employer's booth at the show, I got just a precious few minutes to look around . . . less than an hour actually. Between 10 hour days and nightly planned dinners I didn't get to see much of anything. Still, I took the few minutes I did have to look around a small part of the show.
It seems that every year, electronics manufacturers vie for bragging rights for manufacturing the biggest television display. Three years ago, Samsung used CES to unveil its 80 inch set. Now it's 2008, and the newly renamed Panasonic Corporation (formerly Matsushita) unveiled a 150 inch, high-definition plasma display. Wow! The resolution and color was absolutely stunning! This baby is 11 feet wide by over 6 feet tall.

Panasonic's 150" HD television display panel at CES 2008
Too large for all but the largest of homes, I imagine this king-sized product will find its home in such venues as sports bars and casinos. You can read Yahoo! Tech's review of this set by Christopher Null HERE.
I have yet to make the leap to HDTV, but there a few things that are keeping me from doing so. One is the cost. I would have to toss a perfectly good 36" NTSC (standard definition) television and spend good money on a new HD set. Then I would have to upgrade my DVD recorder, and the war between HD-DVD and BluRay is far from over. Third, I would have to pay more for HD programming and a new DVR. Finally I have noticed that HD programs look absolutely stunning on an HDTV. However, regular programs look grainy, blurry, and contain compression artifacts, all resulting in a less than stellar experience when viewing standard tv programs, even on the best of HD sets. Ultimately, I suppose we will all have HD televisions, but for now, I am holding out.
There was one very annoying and obnoxious display at CES 2008. Across the aisle from my company's display, LG Electronics had a huge booth and a stage set up. All day long, incessant, loud, non-stop techno music was playing at a deafening level, with a bass beat every half second that shook you from the inside. It was so loud as to make conversation with visitors to our booth difficult. Then here's the totally ridiculous part . . . they had several "fashion shows" throughout the day. What this has to do with selling TVs is beyond me.
They had a male and female announcer who would alternate saying things like "Life is smart", "Life is stylish", "Life is sparkling", etc. After each line, a model would come out and strike a pose. Then, for watching, the audience would be given a writing pen after the show.
Someone actually came to work one day and pitched this idea. Then someone bought off on it. This could be the boss' idea, and all the "yes" men and women chimed in. Imagine a meeting at LG one day:
Boss: "I have this great idea. We'll sell TVs with a fashion show and play loud techno all day!"
Employee 1: "Great idea! We should have thought of that"
Employee 2: "That's why you're the boss!"
Employee 3: "This will sell thousands of TVs!!"
Here is what this extremely loud and annoying "fashion show" looked like:

"Life is stylish!"
This was so obnoxious that I have taken a vow to never buy an LG or Zenith product. Maybe this makes sense in Korea, but here it was just dumb. At least that's how I see it.
It seems that every year, electronics manufacturers vie for bragging rights for manufacturing the biggest television display. Three years ago, Samsung used CES to unveil its 80 inch set. Now it's 2008, and the newly renamed Panasonic Corporation (formerly Matsushita) unveiled a 150 inch, high-definition plasma display. Wow! The resolution and color was absolutely stunning! This baby is 11 feet wide by over 6 feet tall.

Panasonic's 150" HD television display panel at CES 2008
Too large for all but the largest of homes, I imagine this king-sized product will find its home in such venues as sports bars and casinos. You can read Yahoo! Tech's review of this set by Christopher Null HERE.
I have yet to make the leap to HDTV, but there a few things that are keeping me from doing so. One is the cost. I would have to toss a perfectly good 36" NTSC (standard definition) television and spend good money on a new HD set. Then I would have to upgrade my DVD recorder, and the war between HD-DVD and BluRay is far from over. Third, I would have to pay more for HD programming and a new DVR. Finally I have noticed that HD programs look absolutely stunning on an HDTV. However, regular programs look grainy, blurry, and contain compression artifacts, all resulting in a less than stellar experience when viewing standard tv programs, even on the best of HD sets. Ultimately, I suppose we will all have HD televisions, but for now, I am holding out.
There was one very annoying and obnoxious display at CES 2008. Across the aisle from my company's display, LG Electronics had a huge booth and a stage set up. All day long, incessant, loud, non-stop techno music was playing at a deafening level, with a bass beat every half second that shook you from the inside. It was so loud as to make conversation with visitors to our booth difficult. Then here's the totally ridiculous part . . . they had several "fashion shows" throughout the day. What this has to do with selling TVs is beyond me.
They had a male and female announcer who would alternate saying things like "Life is smart", "Life is stylish", "Life is sparkling", etc. After each line, a model would come out and strike a pose. Then, for watching, the audience would be given a writing pen after the show.
Someone actually came to work one day and pitched this idea. Then someone bought off on it. This could be the boss' idea, and all the "yes" men and women chimed in. Imagine a meeting at LG one day:
Boss: "I have this great idea. We'll sell TVs with a fashion show and play loud techno all day!"
Employee 1: "Great idea! We should have thought of that"
Employee 2: "That's why you're the boss!"
Employee 3: "This will sell thousands of TVs!!"
Here is what this extremely loud and annoying "fashion show" looked like:

"Life is stylish!"
This was so obnoxious that I have taken a vow to never buy an LG or Zenith product. Maybe this makes sense in Korea, but here it was just dumb. At least that's how I see it.
Friday, January 04, 2008
America's Most Lustful City? Denver!
Who'da thunk it? Nearby Denver, Colorado is officially America's Most Lustful City, according to ACNielsen, who rated cities based on over the counter sales of contraceptives. The Mile High City apparently has lots of people joining the Mile High Club, as sales of birth control is 189% of what would be expected for its market size.
Other cities that are near the top of the list? San Antonio, Washington, Cleveland, and Salt Lake City.
Other cities that are near the top of the list? San Antonio, Washington, Cleveland, and Salt Lake City.
End of the Line - But Not for Long
One of my early childhood memories is riding the miniature train at Houston's Hermann Park. My mom & dad would take me and my sisters there to go to the park, the zoo, and to go on picnics. One of the highlights was the train ride through the park
When my own boys were small we did the same thing, only now the park has the Houston Natural History Museum as well, where my kids loved the T-Rex skeleton. Of course, the train was also a big part of the park then.
So it was with some sadness that I noticed the story in the Houston Chronicle that said the train made its last run on New Year's Day after a fifty-year run. Surely, they weren't going to do away with this Houston institution and important part of my childhood!
Well, they are, and they aren't. The old train is indeed shut down for good; but a new, improved version is slated to be open by March. The new train is to be longer, safer, and make stops at the Zoo, the Natural History Museum, the Miller Outdoor Theater, and the Texas Medical Center. It also will connect with a stop for MetroRail, the city's light rail system.
The next time I get down to Houston, I may just have to give the new "choo choo" a ride. Who knows, it could be fun!
Click on the video below to play it.
When my own boys were small we did the same thing, only now the park has the Houston Natural History Museum as well, where my kids loved the T-Rex skeleton. Of course, the train was also a big part of the park then.
So it was with some sadness that I noticed the story in the Houston Chronicle that said the train made its last run on New Year's Day after a fifty-year run. Surely, they weren't going to do away with this Houston institution and important part of my childhood!
Well, they are, and they aren't. The old train is indeed shut down for good; but a new, improved version is slated to be open by March. The new train is to be longer, safer, and make stops at the Zoo, the Natural History Museum, the Miller Outdoor Theater, and the Texas Medical Center. It also will connect with a stop for MetroRail, the city's light rail system.
The next time I get down to Houston, I may just have to give the new "choo choo" a ride. Who knows, it could be fun!
Click on the video below to play it.
Wednesday, January 02, 2008
She Didn't Even Ask to Shop at Macy's
From the "you can't make this stuff up" files, the Austin American-Statesman is reporting today the bizarre case of an Austin police officer who has been accused of having a relationship with a prostitute. That's not the weird part. He pays her with clothing. That's weird, but still not the weird part. You want to know what the weird part is? He gets the clothing by taking her shopping at Wal-Mart and letting the prostitute shop from his wife's closet! Now that's weird! I told you...you can't make this stuff up!
No doubt, there is one pissed off wife in Austin, Texas tonight. Just when Texas Monthly publishes their 2007 "Bum Steer Awards", we have a contender for next year's list.
No doubt, there is one pissed off wife in Austin, Texas tonight. Just when Texas Monthly publishes their 2007 "Bum Steer Awards", we have a contender for next year's list.
Tuesday, January 01, 2008
Sunday, December 30, 2007
Icicle
There is a growing icicle coming down from the roof, each day getting a little longer. The melting and refreezing of snow on the roof is creating quite the spire of ice. Since I may have to go take it down, I decided it needed a photo taken first. I would estimate its current length at about 4 feet. It has become a crystalline stalactite.This is a twilight time picture, but it gives an unusual lighting effect to see the yellow from the incadescent bulb at the bottom gradiating into the bluish hues of the late afternoon sky and the ice itself. Add to it the reflections from the icicle creating patterns of light on the wall, and it gives you an interesting picture.
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