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11/16/04 09:00 - ID#35662

Louching away the days



I am so louche today! (said with the voice from that funny WTF movie, or Ali G's Borat or Brüno. It has suddendly become chorenight at 567. Got (e:matthew) and (e:lilho) gettin' jiggy wid da dishes and vaccuum respectively ((e:paul) is here too, doing the difficult task of drying the dishes). I am trying to not be drawn in. I took up a broom for a bit, watered the plants, and rearranged things slightly. Now I am hoping no one notices me here in the corner typing away. Thank you elmwoodstrip, take me away <zooooooom>.
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Permalink: Louching_away_the_days.html
Words: 105
Location: Buffalo, NY


11/16/04 10:15 - ID#35661

Is this really going to happen?

Here is the Schedule of Service Impacts for B&ECPL Patrons Under Erie County's Proposed 2005 Red Budget:

Last day to borrow and renew materials
Tuesday, December 7, 2004

Return all B&ECPL materials by
Tuesday, December 28, 2004

All book drops will be closed after
Tuesday, January 4, 2005

Tell your elected officials how important YOUR library is to YOU. Without your support, public library service could end in Buffalo and Erie County! The Erie County Legislature has announced its schedule of 4 public hearings on the proposed 2005 Erie County Budget:

Monday, November 22, 6 p.m.
Lancaster Middle School Auditorium
148 Aurora, Lancaster

Tuesday, November 23, 6 p.m.
Erie Community College City Campus Auditorium
121 Ellicott, Buffalo

Monday, November 29, 6 p.m.
Erie Community College South Campus Room 5101
4041 Southwestern, Orchard Park

Tuesday, November 30, 6 p.m.
Clarence Public Library
Three Town Place, Clarence

Join advocates from across Erie County in a collective effort to keep OUR public libraries from closing in 2005!

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Permalink: Is_this_really_going_to_happen_.html
Words: 157
Location: Buffalo, NY


11/13/04 01:22 - ID#35660

Cen u spel? Livejournal, what!!!

Anyone else in da' house mucho impressed by (e:paul) and his awesome spellcheck?!? Over time it has been perfected until it is quite possibly the most user-friendly and least inconvenient spellcheckers I have ever used. It lets you see the misspelled words and then simply click on the correct suggestion to have it automatically replaced in your entry. No typing on your part... a handy list of suggestions if the closest one just isn't it... and a nice colorful interface to boot.

I told (e:paul) maybe it's time to market this baby. I decided to look around for other comparable services to see what was to offer. Hotmail didn't even offer spellcheck (unless it's something you have to pay for). Livejournal has one, but it sucks muchissimo. Take a look:

image

Crappy, eh? They highlight the misspelled in red and then give you a list containing the words and suggestions. No handy little interface. No clickable suggestions. You actually have to type your own words in, how uncivilized... So if anyone else has praise feel free to share. And, of course, (e:paul) is always available to hear concerns/bugs/suggestions from any of you lovely peeps or peeps-to-be.

sidenote: I just wrote a rant about an hour ago, so take a looksee...



this


way

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Permalink: Cen_u_spel_Livejournal_what_.html
Words: 226
Location: Buffalo, NY


11/13/04 12:23 - ID#35659

Here's a voice from the left

Do we have to ask over and over again why non-corporate interests are under-represented in the corporate media? [inlink]jason,37[/inlink] Our media today only exists with the financial backing of interested parties. Basically 80-95% of local bandwidth (TV, radio, etc.) is broadcast by companies. What is a company? It is a profit-making enterprise (with the exclusion of some non-profits) whose main (sole?) goal is enriching its stockholders. They operate under a corporate charter which was originally only granted by the states to companies to "serve the public good." This definition has slowly lost that original value, and now just about anyone can apply to be a company, after of course the obligatory fee ((e:Jason) you're a corp. right, how hard was it?).

So back to the top with this, we have most of our easily-accessible media controlled by groups of individuals who are mostly concerned with lining their own fat wallets. They are ostensibly policed by the FCC, whose mandate it is to monitor the respective airwaves for any breaches of broadcasting. They are the arbiters of media justice. Normally they sit back and make sure nothing "offensive" is aired (read: Janet's boobie) at least that's what they'd have you believe . In actuality they are in control of a lot of what you and me can see/hear. The appointed (not elected) group just recently raised the amount of media that can be owned by one interest in any given region. Which allows more local/independent outlets to be outbought, though one might ask when our airwaves became commodities (much like our land and resources which are sold to the highest bidder, or the only bidder in most cases), but I digress...as usual.

(e:Jason), (e:Paul) just gave a link to a new local station [inlink]paul,2405[/inlink] which offers many progressive programs, like Democracy Now! which is the Left's answer to the News Hour, if you haven't listened I highly recommend.

You say that you'd like to hear the two sides slamming it out through media, which is surely highly amusing, yet I fear perhaps distracting. We need media that actually gives credit to the profession: observers of the world who report back what they see without slant (or minimized through the harshest of standards). The news should give us information, and then if we want to listen/watch the others bash it out we can. Today everyone is on a side, and few will tell you what's really happening, both on the right and left. And it's simply unfair/unreal to make everyone become a student of media scientists simply to decipher the reality of the world around them.

...I wanted to write about a neat book I just finished (from the soon-extinct library)...but soon
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Permalink: Here_s_a_voice_from_the_left.html
Words: 462
Location: Buffalo, NY


11/12/04 02:53 - ID#35658

Out of tech loser

No posting from cell-phones here, oh-no missy! No siree!! Thank you maam!!! Party was fun. Like hanging out with people. Though, as usual, I hung out most with those I know anyways. Neat rambling bungalow ranch-house-on-a-rooftop thing you got going there Carolyn (maybe (e:Carolyn) soon?). Brought the 40 for effect (think about that 2ways). Still missed the missed-one, felt nostalgic today, strange since it's been but a month. Played the cigarette game with (e:robin) and the master-strategista (aka (e:soyeon)), who kicked my ass (as she did so handily at Chess). The days they are a-rollin'. Rollin' right by my lazyass. I went out last night too, but the hipsters were too cool (who likes to see white people dancing to white people music anyways?). (e:Flacidness) was cool as was cousin Frieda whose birthday we feted. (e:Lilho) cut my hairs. They was longer than a witch's titty. Now I am hot & stylin'. Better watch out lest I steal yo' shoty, ya'll! Update on life. Thanks for caring. Peace out and big ups t'ya'll. Fools.
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Permalink: Out_of_tech_loser.html
Words: 178
Location: Buffalo, NY


11/11/04 08:02 - ID#35657

Can we argue the same topic sometime?

That last rant down below there is maybe less than precisely precise, I suppose... As usual Paul has to take our little discussion and blow it up until the side I'm on is killing the jews. The point I was trying to make is that the lines that scientists' have drawn around certain things to classify them are arbitrary. When you break it down we are simply using a catalog system to help us better understand the way things work and how they got to be that way, Let's take a library as an example. The books there are currently arranged along the lines of good ole' Dewey's Decimal System. It works just great, but it's not the only way we could classify them, we could stack them all according to color or size, or by authorname.yearpublished.genre.etc. We use Dewey's system because it helps us to find what we're looking for, not because it is inherent in the nature of books to be stacked that way. All science is like that, and the history of science is just chock full of mistakes we've made (or better put, classifications that weren't optimized for maximum usefulness) and later fixed or rearranged.

So is a polyp an animal and not a plant. As the word is currently defined by most scientists (animals generally move, eat, have no cell wall, etc) then perhaps yes. But that's not the point. The point is, as quoted from wikipedia "The actual boundaries between animals and plants are artificial; they are rather due to the ingenious analysis of the systematist than actually resident in objective nature." Couldn't have said it better myself. So now let me get back to killing babies or committing genocide with my atrocious beliefs.

Oh yeah...check out the Yesmen if you want a pretty funny documentary. Bunch of guys play some neat little parnks on the evil of evils, the WTO (with unfortunately and amazingly little surprise or astonishment garnered). 'Sat the market arcade

and WHOA! Arafat is dead and Ashcroft has resigned. The effects of both are still up in the air. Alberto Gonzales may be no soul-singing good-ole-boy patriot like Johnny but he's no angel (remember the wonderful "draft memo on the treatment of prisoners that called some of the Geneva Convention provisions on prisoner treatment 'quaint'"?). And who will/can replace Arafat? More war all around for everybody. Whoopie!
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Permalink: Can_we_argue_the_same_topic_sometime_.html
Words: 424
Location: Buffalo, NY


11/11/04 02:37 - ID#35656

Polyp tree

Where does the definition lie? We seek to find union with the real, but forsake reality. What is useful and plentiful we mistake for what is valuable and necessary. Differentiation is a construction. Where the ends meet is god. Where the ends meet are gods. The essential and meaningless. The present and the thought. Some things are real that we don't comprehend. Some things we comprehend are not real. Truth is an illusion, at least the truth that you see. Our vision limits the sky that can be. The sky that disappears under furious moon. Moons of Jupiter conceal surprises. Of war? Craters abound, wondrous scars, treading still water where absence is proud. Scientists know only as much as we tell them. Their goals are apparent; separation is key. But we are all equal or God is above. I don't believe that, and neither does the polyp tree.
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Permalink: Polyp_tree.html
Words: 148
Location: Buffalo, NY


11/09/04 12:32 - ID#35655

Oh my, it's snowing again

both on my screen and outside my window.

I voted along moral lines, guys, I have to admit it. I was a part of the single largest voting bloc whose vote was determined by a single issue. For me it comes down to the kids. Do we want them seeing everybody in this country enjoying the same rights? Of course not, there are bad people (whose lifestyles/actions go against our most core beliefs) and good people. Bad people should not have the same opportunities as good people. Take Sadaam Hussein, did he really deserve to rule and terrorize Iraq? No way! That's why it is up to the good guys to come clean up the mess he made by installing a good leader/government and wiping away the rest of the bad people who don't want freedom. In our own country we have people who are gay. Now I'm not saying it's their fault (though I had a cousin once who got fixed) but do all the normal good people out there have to bow down to their special needs? Do we have to let them tarnish our sacred institutions? Of course not, that's why we get to vote.

Now there was a question about if it's okay to monitor terrorist suspects posed by (e:ajay) , to which (e:foxygirl) stated that "no homeland security = no America" (a statement to which I heartily agree). You see (e:ajay) we don't have to monitor everybody. Good law-abiding citizens can go about their business with no fear of the government, only bad people have to be worried. And if you're a bad person living in this good country, America, all you need to do to get the rights we allow to you is follow our rules and be good. And if you're not, then there's a nice warm spot in hell with your buddy Sadaam and the Al Qaeda bunch waiting for you in Hell.

sidenote: The Swan kicks ass! It is such a good representation of America. It takes people and finally gives them the chance to be on top of the world, what every American wants. The women on the show all have deep problems that they don't have the money to fix, but Fox is giving them this opportunity. Even the losers end up 10x better than they were before. Just imagine if your whole life was suddenly transformed for the better! And they don't stop with the superficial, no, this show digs deep, reshaping the woman beneath as well as the one on the surface. Don't we all need this kind of introspection in these times of decaying morals?
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Permalink: Oh_my_it_s_snowing_again.html
Words: 447
Location: Buffalo, NY


11/08/04 11:34 - ID#35654

Well Duh!

Headline reads:

[size=l]Air pollution is hazardous for your heart![/size]

Like (e:matthew) posted recently, these news flashes, supposed brilliant flashes of insight, are becmoing ridiculous, especially when it comes to health. Basically, everything we already know, or that's just plain common-sense, is being shouted out as if it were a secret of the natural world unraveled for us. Last week it was: Fruits shown to be good for you, before that: Exercize appears to reduce risk of heart attack, or Moving a little helps you not get Alzeihmers. So move a little, eat healthy, don't breathe smoke... where the hell do they get these crazy ideas?
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Permalink: Well_Duh_.html
Words: 118
Location: Buffalo, NY


11/07/04 02:32 - ID#35653

All the libraries will close

Insane, just absolutely insane! If the current budget propsed by Giambra goes through, all the Buffalo and Erie County Public libraries will close. This is just ridiculous. What kind of a city offers no libraries? I'm sure we can blame this on Bush somehow... Just one more reason to jump ship before we end up at the bottom (though once we're there maybe we'll meet up with all the services already dumped overboard). Write to the your local government peoples and tell them you won't stand for the libraries to close. Complain to your friends who might not know. I mean there's got to be something that can be done to keep at least some of the libraries open.
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Permalink: All_the_libraries_will_close.html
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Location: Buffalo, NY


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