Follow the adventures of Knut, the German-born polar bear cub being raised in a nontraditional setting (not just the zoo part of the raising).
Awkwardly translated into English (thanks Babelfish!) here.
Übersetzt nicht an allen, hier.
Interesting…
I’m only linking because it automatically plays when it’s embedded.
Here’s an amusing one about an Old Testament story.
I had to read this several times to really believe it. Texas State Sen. Dan Patrick has introduced a bill that would basically authorize the state to pay women to give their babies up for adoption:
Under Patrick’s SB 1567, AKA the Texas Baby Purchasing Act of 2007, women would qualify for a $500 payment from the state within 60 days of signing away all parental rights to their newborn children.
The full text is available here.
Lest you wonder if the Sen. Patrick is asking the state to engage in an illegal form of baby brokering, he has covered all the bases. The bill provides: “Section 25.08, Penal Code, does not apply to the grant or acceptance of money under this section.”
Penal Code Section 25.08 provides as follows:
§ 25.08. SALE OR PURCHASE OF CHILD.
(a) A person commits an offense if he:
(1) possesses a child younger than 18 years of age or has the custody, conservatorship, or guardianship of a child younger than 18 years of age, whether or not he has actual possession of the child, and he offers to accept, agrees to accept,
or accepts a thing of value for the delivery of the child to another or for the possession of the child by another for purposes of adoption; or
(2) offers to give, agrees to give, or gives a thing of value to another for acquiring or maintaining the possession of a child for the purpose of adoption.(b) It is an exception to the application of this section that the thing of value is:
(1) a fee or reimbursement paid to a child-placing agency as authorized by law;
(2) a fee paid to an attorney, social worker, mental health professional, or physician for services rendered in the usual course of legal or medical practice or in providing adoption counseling;
(3) a reimbursement of legal or medical expenses incurred by a person for the benefit of the child; or
(4) a necessary pregnancy-related expense paid by a child-placing agency for the benefit of the child’s parent during the pregnancy or after the birth of the child as permitted by the minimum standards for child-placing agencies and Department of Protective and Regulatory Services rules.(c) An offense under this section is a felony of the third degree, except that the offense is a felony of the second degree if the actor commits the offense with intent to commit an offense under Section 43.25.
Now I have no idea how much of a shortage there is for adoptable children (although here are some statistics), but there is something downright creepy about this. Leaving aside the issue of abortion as a possible alternative to the baby being, uh, placed through the Adoption Incentive Program, how is this different from selling one’s baby into adoption in a way that does violate the above-quote Penal Code section? Well, the answer is because Sen. Patrick (and possibly the Texas Legislature) says so. Here’s another question: how does this fit in with Republicans’ general preference for privatization? Republicans want to limit spending, downsize the government, and turn as many functions over to the private sector as possible (at least, you say so in your 2004 party platform, pp. 22-23). I mean, really, in for a penny, in for a pound, right? How about we create baby rescue societies? It has worked as a means of relieving the burden on our publicly-funded animal shelters. Those tend to be nonprofit ventures, though, providing no incentives for providing the merchandise to the organization (in this case, dogs, but it could be anything, really).
Of course, you want to make sure an adequate market exists for all the new babies you will be acquiring. One of the most important rules of business is to never acquire inventory you don’t know you can move. Maybe it is time to loosen some of those restrictions on who may adopt. Heck, if we get lucky, maybe the state of Texas will be collecting perpetual royalties from its very own Truman Show!
On the other hand, I may be full of shit and SB 1567 may be a terrible idea. Besides, who wants to run the risk that the biggest cutomer might be this guy?
Ever since I started writing here, I’ve been wondering exactly what the hell I’m doing. While at times it is very cathartic to get things off my chest, I sometimes wonder if this isn’t just getting me even more keyed up. A post from Glenn Greenwald at Salon helped put some things in perspective for me:
The point here — as always — is to try to force the media to write about the stories it covers in a more critical and factual manner, to compel them to abandon the cheap and lazy cliches that otherwise frame everything they write. That is one of the most critical functions of blogs, and it is one of the goals that is realistically attainable by bloggers and their readers working together.
I have no illusions that anyone in the mainstream media pays any attention whatsoever to this blog, but someone out there is reading it (I think), so at least I’m getting to put my own warped take on things out there in the stream of consciousness. I will not stop until I have wiped out idiocy in its entirety. Or until I come up with something better to do.
After spending the last few days dodging lanyard-clad pedestrians in my car as I slogged through newfound downtown traffic, a few questions occurred to me.
1. Is musical talent somehow incompatible with the use of soap and/or deoderant?
2. Do you honestly think the green hair looks good, or is this just your way of pointing out the essential shallowness of our materialistic culture in the most attention-grabbing way possible?
3. Seriously, what’s up with the B.O.?
4. Thank you for staying out of my neighborhood. You can have downtown for a few days, I suppose, but leave my neighborhood alone.
5. Thanks again for leaving. Smell ya later (seriously).
Thank you, Tom DeLay, for more pearls of idiocy (via Huffington Post):
Tom Delay on Meet the Press, 3/18/07, on the redeployment of troops:
“It is surrender. This is hard so I want to surrender. That’s exactly what it is.”Later, he questioned the patriotism of those who would protest the war in Iraq:
DELAY: “It is my opinion that when you go to war we ought to all come together. You can debate going to war, that is a legitimate debate, but once you have our soldiers and our young people dying on the battlefield, we should all come together. And we shouldn’t have what we had yesterday on the mall in Washington D.C., those are not in my opinion patriots, that are talking about impeaching the Commander in Chief.”
RUSSERT: Is setting a date for withdrawal…
DELAY: I think it’s aiding and abetting the enemy. When you tell the enemy what your strategy is, that is aiding and abetting the enemy, because they can use that strategy to come back and harm your soldiers.Tom Delay, in 1999:
“Clinton’s bombing campaign has caused all of these problems to explode.” He “only has two choices, occupy Yugoslavia and take Milosevic out” or “to negotiate some sort of diplomatic end, diplomatic agreement in order to end this failed policy.”
[I support legislation] “directing the president … to remove U.S. Armed Forces from their positions in connection with the present operations against the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.”Tom Delay, in 1998, on calling for the impeachment of a Commander-in-Chief:
“Shall we follow the rule of law and do our constitutional duty no matter unpleasant, or shall we follow the path of least resistance, close our eyes to the potential lawbreaking, forgive and forget, move on and tear an unfixable hole in our legal system? No man is above the law, and no man is below the law. That’s the principle that we all hold very dear in this country.”
Also, thank you Michael Seitzman, for saving me the trouble of tracking down those quotes. This has been bothering me for some time.
If being a “patriot” means unquestioning fealty to a Commander in Chief who has done little to earn my trust, then no, Tom, I am not a patriot.
If being a “patriot” means supporting a puported effort to defend my “freedoms” by politely declining to use those very freedoms and sitting idly by as they are eroded by the very people claiming to protect them, then no, Tom, I am not a patriot.
If being a “patriot” means supporting those who ignore the advice of experienced military leaders when it does not conform to the pre-conceived notions of a group of people who have never served a millisecond in combat (and huntin’ don’t count, Dick), then no, Tom, I am not a patriot.
If being a “patriot” means supporting leaders who lie through their teeth, again and again, then try to tell me they never said the things they are on record saying again and again, then no, Tom, I am not a patriot.
If being a “patriot” means accepting the maxim that “9/11 changed everything” at face value without asking what, exactly, changed and why it necessitates the actions they have taken, then no, Tom, I am not a patriot.
If being a “patriot” means unquestioning support for a war launched when the Commander in Chief did not know the difference between Sunni and Shiite, then no, Tom, I am not a patriot.
If being a “patriot” means absolute fealty to the sovereign, something you seem to expect, even though our ancestors once fought a war about it, then no, Tom, I am not a patriot.
If being a “patriot” means accepting without question the cognitive dissonance that arises from the oft repeated claims that terrorists will strike us again, and only Bush can keep us safe, but they will strike again, then no, Tom, I am not a patriot.
If being a “patriot” means allowing political figures to claim that a Democratic victory is a victory for the terrorists, then ask with a straight face that we stop all the partisan bickering, then no, Tom, I am not a patriot.
If being a “patriot” means ignoring the fact that the only reason Bush has not yet committed impeachable perjury a la Bill Clinton is because he has refused to testify under oath, then no, Tom, I am not a patriot.
If being a “patriot” means that I would stop typing a litany of complaints about the way that you are destroying American society for any reason other than that I have other things to do and my hands are tired, then no, Tom, I am not a patriot.
Don’t have time to get into this too in-depth right now, but in the world of blog comments, it seems as though what’s good for the goose ain’t good for the gander…or something like that.
Just read the dang article. It’s worth the time.
“For ’tis sport to have the engineer/ Hoist with his own petar….”
Hamlet, act III, scene 4, lines 206 and 207
I went to see the new movie “300” last weekend, and pretty much decided I was going to put it out of my mind as quickly as possible. Then the inevitable conversations, analogies to current events, etc. ensued, so now I have to write something down to get it back out of my head.
My favorite review (for its not-quite-intentional hilarity), is this one from Ben Shapiro:
The Spartans of “300” are brutal. The opening scene of the movie depicts a Spartan soldier, standing on a cliff overlooking a valley of skulls, inspecting a baby to make sure it is hardy enough. If the baby is too weak, we are told, it will be left for dead. This isn’t exactly civilized conduct.
But the Persian hordes make the Spartans look like members of a British tea club. Xerxes is an androgynous giant of a man with more body piercings than Christina Aguilera. His camp is full of decadent bisexual promiscuity. He seeks worldwide dictatorship and threatens Sparta with mass murder of its male citizens, rape of its female citizens, and use of women and children as slaves if Sparta fails to submit to his rule.
The Spartans, by contrast, say they are fighting for “freedom.” In which case, “300” is an old-fashioned battle between the forces of freedom and the forces of oppression.
And the left doesn’t like it at all. Many reviewers have panned “300” not on artistic grounds, or even on grounds of inanity, but on the grounds that the Spartans in the film are a bunch of jackbooted thugs; that the tyranny they fight is less tyrannical than Sparta; that good vs. evil is too simplistic. “His troops are like al Qaeda in adult diapers,” writes Kyle Smith of the New York Post. “Keeping in mind Slate’s Mickey Kaus’ Hitler Rule — never compare anything to Hitler — it isn’t a stretch to imagine Adolf’s boys at a “300” screening, heil-fiving each other throughout and then lining up to see it again.” A.O. Scott makes the obligatory racial point: “It may be worth pointing out that unlike their mostly black and brown foes, the Spartans and their fellow Greeks are white.”
First off, the reviewer here states that “the Left” doesn’t like this movie “on the grounds that the Spartans in the film are a bunch of jackbooted thugs” and that “that good vs. evil is too simplistic.” He quotes two other reviewers (one from the N.Y. Post!), neither of whom say anything about these claims–one seems to be making the opposite, that the right would like this movie (Nazis were right-wing, after all), and a rather obvious racial comment. So how do we have any idea at all what the “Left” thinks, at least based on his selected quotes? What we do know, however (POSSIBLE SPOILER ALERT), is that the Spartans kill newborn infants deemed to be “unfit,” that the Persians have threatened to kill or enslave all Spartans if they do not submit, and that the Spartans’ claims to be fighting in defense of “freedom” are not especially credible. In fact, the Spartans are ultimately betrayed by an “unfit” Spartan who would have been killed at birth had his parents not hidden him, and who grew up to resemble a Gollum and Quasimodo hybrid. He is shunned by the Spartans (although not at all rudely or unreasonably) and is wooed by the Persians’ kick-ass parties. Still, it begs the question of why he had to wait until adulthood to even ask for the right to exist from his own people. The Spartans of “300” are only the “good guys” if you seriously shut out and ignore most of their culture (then there’s the whole Council of Sparta subplot that makes no sense at all, but I’ll leave that aside.)
Calling this a classic “good vs. evil” story is really stretching it. Calling it a high-tech visual masterpiece with little or no substance is more accurate. Really, very few good stories perfectly state a good vs. evil dichotomy. “The Lord of the Rings” films were hailed a few years ago for their depiction of good vs. evil, but even those films presented the theme with a distinct lack of simplicity. (ANOTHER SPOILER ALERT, ALTHOUGH IF YOU HAVEN’T SEEN THE MOVIES BY NOW I DOUBT YOU CARE) The little-discussed fact of that story is that the hero, Frodo, actually failed in his quest. At the critical moment, evil won out, and he refused to destroy the Ring. It was only destroyed because Gollum was (a) even more under the sway of its evil, and (b) clumsy. Hardly a ringing endorsement of the greater power of good, but a more believable story in many ways (if you accept the existence of trolls and such).
But going back to “300,” if I have to choose between a despotic city-state that was safeguarding the cradle of Western civilization and a despotic empire that had goat-headed lute players and the villains from Stargate SG-1, I guess I’d have to side with Sparta. But don’t ask me to feel all noble about it. After all, they practice eugenics and take their marching orders from pederastic lepers. Just enjoy the dang movie, to the extent possible, and save the politics for the blogs.
Here’s some more on the global-warming-as-somehow-anti-Christian front–I consider it good news:
The board of the National Association of Evangelicals has rebuffed leaders of the Christian right who had called for the association to silence or dismiss its Washington policy director because of his involvement in the campaign against global warming.
Prominent Christian conservatives like James C. Dobson, chairman of Focus on the Family, and Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, had sent a letter to the association’s leaders this month accusing the policy director, the Rev. Richard Cizik, of “using the global warming controversy to shift the emphasis away from the great moral issues of our time,” which they defined as abortion, homosexuality and teaching children sexual morality and abstinence.
Yes, because as we all know, hordes of gay commandos are at all times massed at the Canadian border, waiting to loose their gay all over everyone, stop all the breeding, and offer fact-based sex ed to the nation’s teenagers (with a catchy techno backbeat). Gay is most commonly transmitted through phlogiston, a little-known fact. Gay also causes hurricanes, tornadoes, and microphone feedback. The Minoan civilization was destroyed by a giant explosion of gay. Thank goodness some people still understand that this is the greatest crisis America now faces.
Say, did anyone notice Baghdad is on fire?