Archive for March, 2010

Mar 31 2010

Planned obsolescence

Today was an interesting day-well, not really. I had to go to the doctor, which is never fun. Every time I go to see the man now-it seems as if he uncovers some other issue that I need to worry about. I never really feel my age-except when I go to see the doctor. ( And/or I go out for a night of booming-then I really feel it the next day. I’m sure there is no correlation. :-)   ).

And in the other piece of news, I had to buy a new I-pod. My old 30GB classic I-pod was not able to hold a full charge any more. I’d charge it up and it would maybe give me an hour of time if I was lucky. I had taken it to the Apple Store and they said it would be $ 129 to replace the battery. For only a $ 100 more I could get a 160GB model.

Which was my original plan. However then I realized that my I-phone has all of my movies on it anyway-at least the current ones I want to see-so maybe all I really needed was an I-Pod nano.  My music library is relatively small (only about 670 songs), and since I have gotten the I-phone the only time I was using the I-pod was when I went running or went to work out. As the weather is getting warmer, I am really trying to get a run in each day. But I have to have my tunes-1.6 miles without tunage just really sucks. Having the I-pod allows me to break the run up into manageable bites: I keep telling my self, I’ll keep running till the song ends, and then I’ll start walking. Then a new song comes on and I repeat the drill.

The run allows me to hopefully get the blood flowing-and hopefully is doing something to stem off more bad news from the doctor. Perhaps. More importantly, it lets me channel my rage, something I have been experiencing a lot lately-especially when I turn on the news. During the run, I can slip away in my mind to my own happy place-where I am in control, and am beating the stuffing out of those who irritate me.

So the problem was-how to get the tunes I need for the time I need. So in the end I bought the Nano. The clincher was the fact that it had an FM radio embedded. So now I can get home, change, get my run in-and then hopefully catch market place while I sit on the front porch, wheezing.

It would seem my I-pod may not be the only thing with planned obsolescence-it might be that I might be fitting into that category. I sure hope not-I’ve still got things to do. :-)

Nonetheless I find it interesting that Apple has designed the device to be so hard to get a battery in it. Or is there something I am missing here?

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Mar 30 2010

I’ll bet you thought I forgot.

Published by under Feminist Buffoonery

That it was March and so for the entire month I have to hear about Women’s History month. How could I forget? Every day when I come to work and go to get on the elevator I have to look at a sign telling me “Its time write women back into history.”

Oh really? So Betsy Ross, Joan of Arc, Anne Boleyn, and Mata Hari ( to name a few) were not a part of history? Could have fooled me. And here I thought women always were a part of history as Uncle William Shakespere  reminded me. “From women’s eyes this doctrine I derive:They sparkle still the right Promethean fire;They are the books, the arts, the academes,That show, contain, and nourish all the world.”

Seems to me women have been in the history books since day 1, right when Eve turned Adam into the first man to be lied to by a woman. ( Regrettably he was not the last…as the tradition continues right up to today.)

No-when one says, “writing women back into history”-it really needs to be translated into its real meaning:

“Setting the bar for historical achievement so low-than any average everyday achievement for either a man or a woman becomes ‘historic’ if it is done by a woman”

 You can quote me on that  if you wish.

How do I know this? I read it the other day in the paper. There right on page one, I read all about the “historic” achievements of Trish Beckman. Who is she you ask?  Well lookie here:

“Among her other aviation accomplishments, Beckman – who retired from 28 years in the Navy as a commander in 1999 – was in a group of women who testified to Congress about the importance of them being able to train for and fly combat missions.”

When you dig into it you find this-she basically did the same thing many men did-only they never got a subpoena to testify in front of Congress.  She flew EC-130′s.  She got to go Test Pilot School. She got back seat qualified in a few fighters. (So did I-the fighter part- not the TPS part.). That and $ 3.20 will get you a cup of coffee at Starbucks.

 Hate to break this too you-but lots of people get to do that.  Hell, I’d have gone to Washington on my own dime to tell Congress what a bone headed idea it was to have mixed gender squadrons.

Summing it up another way-she is historic for showing up for work on time for 28 years. How many men did that and all they got was a kick in the ass out the door? No entries in the history book for them.

You can read about more great non-achievements here, here, and here.

I need to answer the door now-the thought police are here to take me away…………

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Mar 30 2010

Rendering unto Caesar….

Published by under Assholes,Singapore

The homage that he demands-in Singapore that it is. Lee Kwan Yew shows again why he and his family rank among the tyrants:

In 1994, Philip Bowring, a contributor to the International Herald Tribune’s op-ed page, agreed as part of an undertaking with the leaders of the government of Singapore that he would not say or imply that Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong had attained his position through nepotism practiced by his father Lee Kuan Yew. In a February 15, 2010, article, Mr. Bowring nonetheless included these two men in a list of Asian political dynasties, which may have been understood by readers to infer that the younger Mr. Lee did not achieve his position through merit. We wish to state clearly that this inference was not intended. We apologize to Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew and former Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong for any distress or embarrassment caused by any breach of the undertaking and the article.

The fact that it is true-neither man would have their positions save for the fact that they are related to the puppet master himself-would appear to have nothing to do with the issue.

No one should be suprised that the long arm of LKY reaches even into the United States. Nonetheless it is dissapointing-one might have hoped the NYT would have more of a backbone. Then again-the Lee family controls the courts in Singapore, and they are well known for suing the bejesus out of any one who dares to critcize their one party dictatorship state. 

Is there any question whatsoever that Singapore, despite having had elections for decades, is authoritarian by Western standards?  Or that nepotism and other forms of personal loyalty plays a stronger role in Singapore than in true representative democracies?  Or that Lee Kuan Yew played and continues to play an outsized role in Singapore and People’s Action Party politics?

 

No surprise whatsoever. Look at J.B. Jeyaretnam and what he went through. I suspect that just like with JB, this issue with the Times was personal to LKY-everything is to him. And the Times knew that if they wanted to operate in Singapore-they were going to have to grovel. It is the devil’s bargain that LKY made with the sheep people of Singapore a long time ago. Nice place to live-no freedom of speech or the press. The only real surprise is the kid glove treatment they get from the rest of the world. Money talks.

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Mar 28 2010

Through the looking glass….

Published by under Assholes

Alice in Wacko-land. H/T to Spike!

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Mar 28 2010

Spring is sprung?

Published by under Pictures

I think the jury is still out on that. Woke up to Palm Sunday raining cats and dogs outside. Still made it to Mass, where the priest informs the small group of folks sitting in the pews , ” Mass will be at 9am this morning. And no, you don’t have time to run out to McDonald’s-besides there is not a one of you that won’t be hurt by some quiet meditation in the pew”.

This particular priest has a very strong Irish accent-so if you had heard it in person, it makes for a much better story. Nonetheless-not a person got up an left-although all I could  keep thinking about was the Starbucks two blocks over and how good some coffee would taste.

The weather is off schedule too it would seem. This weekend was brilliantly sunny yesterday, quite chilly and rainy today. When the sun was out though-we did get a chance to go out to the county’s nature park, which allowed me to experiment some more with my toy.

Continue Reading »

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Mar 27 2010

Repressed sexuality…..

Published by under Sex

I stumbled across this article the other day. I suspect it will be more than a little controversial-but I liked it because it echoes some of my own feelings about the mental damage the the “sex is holy” attitude inflicts upon so many people. You might  not realize it, but in my youth I was much more of a black and white person than I am today. And I clearly allowed myself to be made to feel guilty about things that required no such feelings. That twisted mindset caused  me to miss a lot of opportunities that I should have acted on. Fortunately, I was given a second chance in my 40′s-and I made up for a lot of lost time.

Notice too-the author is not saying that sex is not powerful, and that teenagers should not be wary of the consequences. However, the mindset that teaching abistence only does anything appreciable to reduce sexual activity is just crazy. So here now is this little article for your enjoyment:

Bristol Palin And The Trouble With Christian Sex

As part of Bristol Palin’s role as a born-again champion of abstinence, she recently wrapped up filming an episode of ABC’s The Secret Life of the American Teenager, in which she plays the friend of another young single mother. Look for the episode to air this summer, but look for the Palin family’s hubris to air nonstop before, during, and after then.

While Bristol seems much sweeter than the rest of that clan, that arrogantly church-going family reminds me of three fundamental problems that arise from traditional Biblical instruction on sex.

Forget the tired notion that Christians are “against” sex. They’re as wildly for it as anyone; that’s what got Bristol into trouble. Christians simply have an idealized notion of sex and relationships, one that’s increasingly divorced from the reality and the direction of the larger society.

I speak, of course, of mainstream and conservative Christians, who struggle more nervously than others with three fundamental problems that arise from Biblical sexual instruction.

1. Its rules weren’t intended for modern society.
Whether the human body developed gradually over millions of years or suddenly around six millenia ago, God or Mother Nature installed sexual plumbing that slips noisily into gear around age 13 and keeps churning noisily for decades. Yet human society has developed in ways that increasingly delay marriage till 30-something. The body and mind are hardly silly to rebel.

The focus on abstinence, on “presenting one’s body as a holy and living sacrifice to God” (to use Paul’s term), is in 2010 a great way to never meet that special someone. Christianity is so fearful of experimentation on the part of singles that it encourages passivity instead. The notion is that “God will deliver the right person in His perfect timing. I shouldn’t upset His plans or force His hand and get into inappropriate entanglements.” Given that marriage is being delayed more than ever, it’s little wonder that many quality people that I knew in church have moved into middle age solo, against their will and better judgment and deepest longings. And it’s little wonder that some of those who married did so with people outside the church.

2. It promises more than it can deliver.
It criticizes all premarital liaisons as dangerous or at least misguided, and it pooh-poohs any possibility of even some redeeming or meaningful engagement with another human being. And it sets the marital bed up as a far greater good. This leads to the common complaint of various married Christian friends, which is that married sex isn’t what it was cracked up to be. Distress over the mundaneness of it all, anger at the lack of interest on the part of a spouse, and curiosity about what else may have been out there prior to marriage may not be terribly different from what anyone else feels. But Christians’ sense of disappointment is more real and palpable.

At some level, the notion that abstinence in singleness will lead to maximum joy in marriage is a microcosm of the idea that if you show restraint on earth you will have boundless joy in the afterlife. And there are many who, based on how they found the former notion to be untrue, worry about the latter being a bit trumped up, too.

3. It encourages bad faith, not integrity or maturity.
While Christian instruction makes some believers passive, as noted above, it makes others into liars, deceptive to themselves and others.

Given that Sarah Palin has always championed abstinence-only approaches for sex ed, how did Bristol not heed the message? One of numerous studies helps us make sense of it:
the Washington Post reported in 2005 that “although young people who sign a virginity pledge delay the initiation of sexual activity, marry at younger ages and have fewer sexual partners, they are also less likely to use condoms* and more likely to experiment with oral and anal sex,” according to researchers from Yale and Columbia Universities.”

*Hello, Bristol!

Within a contemporary church, you will discover many committed couples who break traditional bounds of romance while pretending to be chaste. They stay overnight, for example, grinding their way past every boundary short of intercourse. I believe Calvin would have had them flogged in Geneva, and I suspect God would have told them to quit the BS and just go ahead and use a condom instead of attempting to play coy.

Theological and ecclesiastical authorities will say that this isn’t what Biblical instruction intends and shouldn’t even be cited as an example of Christian conduct. But few will concede that sex is complicated, and that sometimes the unmarried couple that enjoys sex responsibly but which later breaks up may be healthier than the ones who rationalize loopholes.

There is also the issue of premature marriage. Go back to the huge gap between puberty and marriage that arises due to social changes that extend adolescence longer than ever before. Combine this with Paul’s admonitions that “it is better to marry than to burn,” and far too many devout Christian singles end up getting married before they are emotionally mature. They want the sex now, and marriage is the only way they can get it in a way that they think God can bless. So they marry just after graduation from their Christian college, well before they know what they want in a relationship or can bring to it. This is bad faith, and it is thus small wonder that the divorce rate for Christians is roughly the same as for those who don’t live by the Bible’s demanding standards.

If there is a God, I imagine he or she cares more about emotional health than about rigid rules (“the Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath”). And the various rationalizations and loopholes of true believers can in many cases move them farther from, not closer to, emotional health and an integrated view of reality.

There are various scholars, particularly many feminists, who have dismissed the Christian view of sex in an unflattering or distorted light. I can think, for example, of Karen Armstrong, the bitter ex-nun who makes it her calling to insist, oddly, that Muslims are far more progressive about sex than Christians.

But Christians, from Bristol Palin to Jimmy Swaggart, love them their sex, or at least their idealized concept of what sex should look like. That’s what causes the three major troubles listed above. And that seems to beg for greater discussion in America’s churches.

Rob Asghar’s Lessons from the Holy Wars, a journey from Islam to Christianity to a more open spirituality, is available now at Amazon.

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Mar 27 2010

North Korean Update

Published by under North Korea

I held off commenting on this till more info was out there:

South Korea is scrambling to locate at least 46 South Korean military personnel missing after a one of the South’s naval patrol vessels sank in a tense maritime area disputed by North Korea.  Seoul is investigating what caused the incident, but holding off for now on blaming the North.

South Korean officials say rescuing sailors remains their top priority.  One hundred four South Korean navy personnel were on board the patrol ship in waters west of the Korean peninsula Friday night when it was apparently damaged by an explosion and sank.

South Korean President Lee Myung-bak called an emergency meeting of top security officials Saturday, for the second time in a 12-hour period.  South Korean authorities say they are investigating “all possibilities” as to why the ship went down, including the scenario that the ship was attacked by North Korea.

This is going to get interesting, if the NORK’s were involved, what will the reaction be? Could it have been a mine? Or an internal explosion? No one is yet sure.

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Mar 26 2010

TGIF!

Published by under Beer and Babes

Consider this an open thread.

Definitely need one of those. And later I need one of these:

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Mar 26 2010

More close mindedness

Published by under Assholes

It was not just me that walked away from the Republican party-they walked away from a lot of us. Its not just David Frum who is being shunned-its anyone who thinks for themselves.

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Mar 25 2010

It is that weekend again.

Published by under Asia Expat Living

Oh, somewhere in this favored land the sun is shining bright,
The band is playing somewhere, and somewhere hearts are light,
And somewhere men are laughing, and little children shout;
But there is no joy in Teabaggerville — mighty Rushboy did not get his way.

Its the last weekend of March-and hordes of people who could care less about Lex’s feelings about health care- are descending on the Fragrant Harbor for the annual right of spring. Once again-circumstances and fate have deemed that I should miss it.

Which is a shame. This year it ought to be extra good entertainment given the fact that an American Navy Carrier Battle group is supposed to be in town.

Crazed expat rugby fans mixed up in Wanchai with US Navy Sailors? That ought to be fun to watch. The good news is the Sailors probably won’t be able to get tickets. Or be able to stay up as late as the Rugby fans in Neptunes.

Shame-they could be seeing this:


Better than being here-right now.

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Mar 25 2010

Eating their young……

Published by under Assholes

And here I thought that was only the province of SWO’s (Surface Warfare Officers)……..

Not so, evidently. In the brave new world of the Republican party, if you criticize anything about them-even when you are right-you get fired:

David Frum, who wrote a widely-circulated blog post Sunday suggesting passage of the health care bill amounted to “Waterloo” for the Republican Party, has apparently been forced out of his fellowship at the conservative American Enterprise Institute.

Frum  posted a resignation letter on his blog following a conversation with AEI President Arthur Brooks announcing that his position is “terminated.” 

“I appreciate the consideration that delays my emptying of my office until after my return from travel next week. Premises will be vacated no later than April 9,” Frum wrote in the letter to Brooks. “I have had many fruitful years at the American Enterprise Institute, and I do regret this abrupt and unexpected conclusion of our relationship.”

The American Enterprise Institute-and the Republicans that patronize them, are either deeply cynical or desperately stupid. David Frum represented one of the last voices of sanity in today’s Republican party. The difference between him and say, “William the Bloody” Kristol-is that Frum had the ability to recognize the facts for what they were-not what he simply wished them to be.

However, it would appear that Frum was guilty of the unforgivable sin in todays Rethuglican world-pissing off both Rush and Saint Sarah. We all know that’s a non-starter in  Bizarro land ( e.g. “real conservative values”).

Not to worry David-think of it like getting fired by Sestak, badge of honor. Trust me-I’ve been thrown out of better bars than this one.

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Mar 25 2010

Your tax dollars at work……

Published by under Assholes

Penny wise-pound foolish when it comes to travel dollars:

With a few simple words — “I would have to object” — Republican U.S. Sen. Richard Burr of North Carolina derailed a Senate Armed Services hearing today in which generals had traveled from Korea and Hawaii to testify about the Pentagon’s needs for the next year.

Burr, joining his GOP colleagues’ outrage at the new health reform law, used an obscure Senate rule to prevent the Armed Services committee from meeting this afternoon – even though he said he personally wanted the hearing to occur. 

Republicans are angry over the signing Tuesday of the health reform law that President Barack Obama and Democrats have been working toward for the past year.

Now I realize there will be things for the COCOMS to get done in DC-but regardless of which side of the issue you are on, there are other issues that need to be dealt with.

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Mar 25 2010

Speaking of irony……

It would appear the concept is lost on the founder of the Tea Party movement as well. I am so very not suprised.

“The small-government conservative movement, which includes people who call themselves the tea party patriots and so forth, is about the principles of liberty as embodied in the Constitution, the understanding of which is fleshed out if you read things like the Federalist Papers,” Armey explained. The problem with Democrats and other “people here who do not cherish America the way we do,” he explained, is “they did not read the Federalist Papers.”

And this oversight makes the tea partiers mad. “Who the heck do these people think they are to try to sit in this town with their audacity and second-guess the greatest genius, most creative genius, in the history of the world?” Armey demanded.

A member of the audience passed a question to the moderator, who read it to Armey: How can the Federalist Papers be an inspiration for the tea party, when their principal author, Alexander Hamilton, “was widely regarded then and now as an advocate of a strong central government”?

This, from a man with a PHD and who did a 13 year stint as an economics professor. Then again, it was at University of North Texas. Guess it was over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor too.

Historian Armey was flummoxed by this new information. “Widely regarded by whom?” he challenged, suspiciously. “Today’s modern ill-informed political science professors? . . . I just doubt that was the case in fact about Hamilton.”

Alas, for Armey, it was the case. Hamilton favored a national bank, presidents and senators who served for life and state governors appointed by the president.

Now I only went to a small southern liberal arts military college-but even us poor folks there learned early on that Hamilton was for  a vast body of powers had to be implied by general clauses, and one of these authorized Congress to “make all laws which shall be necessary and proper” for carrying out other powers specifically granted. In other words-the very opposite of what your Mark 1 Mod 0 teabagger advocates.

But never let the facts get in the way of a good story-1st law of teabagging.

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Mar 23 2010

Something every can like!

Published by under Fun things!

Time to have some fun.

Something to laugh about-I watched this video on You Tube tonight.

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Mar 23 2010

Definitely worth repeating…..

Published by under Assholes

The first and last word on the health care debate……..I admit it might be a little melodramatic-but is anything the tea bag nation says about us supporters any less caustic? Nope, nada, zilch.  This is what their overheated, and incredibly hysterical rhetoric drives otherwise reasonable people to. There is nothing “compassionate” about conservatism-the argument that there are loads and loads of “freeloaders” out there trying to cheat teabaggers out their hard earned dollars is central to their orthodoxy. Real hardship and a desire to make changes that float all boats in society are foreign concepts to them. It just has to mean that someone is getting something “for nothing”. Except when they get something for nothing…………then its their “right under the Constitution”.

The Party of Cruelty

By James Howard Kunstler
on March 22, 2010 7:13 AM

     It was amusing to see the Republican party inveigh against health insurance reform as if they were a synod of Presbyterian necromancers girding the nation for a takeover by the spawn of hell.  This was the same gang, by the way, who championed the Medicare Prescription Drug Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003, then regarded as the most reckless giveaway of public funds in human history. Along the way, they enlisted an army of nay-sayers representing everything dark, disgraceful, and ignorant in the American character. If the Republicans keep going this way, they’ll end up with something worse than Naziism: a party that hates everything but believes in absolutely nothing.
     The most striking elements of so-called health care in America these days is how cruel and unjust it is, and in taking a stand against reforming it the Republican party appeared to be firmly in support of cruelty and injustice. This would be well within the historical tradition of other religious crusades which turned political — such as the Spanish Inquisition and the seventeenth century war against witchcraft. Whatever else the Democratic party has stood for in recent history, it has tended to oppose institutional cruelty and injustice, and notice that it has also been the party for keeping religion out of government.
     Now a health care reform act has passed and there’s some reason to hope that insurance companies will be prevented from doing things like canceling the coverage of policy-holders who have the impertinence to actually get sick, which has been their main device for revenue enhancement, and we’ll see how they cope with the idea that being alive in a treacherous world is the fundamental pre-existing condition.
     I surely don’t know if the nation can afford to pay for what this law requires, but then can we really afford to pay for anything? — including the salaries, retirement benefits, and health insurance of congressmen, not to mention two wars, bailout life support for banks, rising unemployment benefits, shovel-ready stimulus projects, et cetera, blah blah?  Probably not.
     My guess is that the health care “industry” will unravel in the years ahead under the weight of its own hypercomplexity just as all the other hypercomplex systems of normal American life (such as it is) groan and collapse under their own unworkable immensities — and I speak here of industrial-style farming, Big Box “consumerism,” Happy Motoring, too-big-to-fail finance, centralized public education, and the pension racket. All the activities of daily life in this country have poor prospects for continuing in their current form.
     At least this once a workable majority in the government has stood up to the forces of cruelty and injustice, and whatever else happens to us in the course of this long emergency, it will be a good thing if the party of fairness and justice identifies its adversaries for what they are: not “partners in governing,” or any such academical-therapeutic bullshit, but enemies of every generous impulse in the national character.
     I hope that Mr. Obama’s party can carry this message clearly into the electoral battles ahead, painting the Republican opposition for what it is: a gang of hypocritical, pietistic sadists, seeking pleasure in the suffering of others while pretending to be Christians, devoid of sympathy, empathy, or any inclination to simple human kindness, constant breakers of the Golden Rule, enemies of the common good.  In fact, the current edition of the Republican party has achieved something really memorable in the annals of collective bad intentions: they have managed to create a sense of the public interest whose main goal is the destruction of the public interest.
      This is exactly what the Republican majority on the Supreme Court did earlier this year by deciding that corporations — which are sociopathic by definition in being answerable only to their shareholders and nothing else — should enjoy the same full privileges in election campaign contributions as human persons, who are assumed to have obligations, duties, and responsibilities to the common good (and therefore to the public interest). This shameful act by the court majority only underscores the chief defining characteristic of Republicans in their current incarnation: an inability to think. And so, naturally Republicans gravitate toward superstition and the traditional devices of improvident religious authorities — persecution of the weak, torture, denial of due process, and dogmas designed to spread hatred.
     I hope the American public begins to understand this, because they have been manipulated in their own pain and hardship by these dark forces, and their thrall to the likes of John Boehner, Sarah Palin, Glenn Beck, Rush, Hannity, and the rest of these vicious morons could easily increase as their economic hardships deepen. We’re facing a comprehensive contraction of wealth and economy that is going to challenge every shared virtue in our national soul, and we’re not going to meet these difficulties successfully without a sense of mutual obligation and sympathy for each other. The Republican party is just itching to turn a giant thumbscrew on the US public — that is, before they try to start burning their enemies at the stake.  We understand that the Health Care Reform Act is a first stand against that.

Well said!

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