“If the bank loans you a million dollars, the bank has a problem. If the bank loans you a billion dollars, the US government has a problem.”— Mark Steyn, September 17, 2008
“Actually, if the bank loans you a billion dollars, the U.S. Taxpayer has a problem.”
— Perri Nelson, September 17, 2008
Nature about to be penalized for violating endangered species act
Published Wed, Jan 31 2007 7:33 PM
Technorati Tags: News and Politics
Washington, Oregon, and Idaho have asked the federal government to punish nature for violations of the endangered species act. From the Associated Press, via the Seattle Times:
PORTLAND — The federal government will consider a petition by Washington, Oregon and Idaho to remove or kill troublesome sea lions to protect endangered salmon and steelhead headed upriver through Bonneville Dam to spawning grounds in the Columbia and Snake rivers.
The action applies to fish protected by the federal Endangered Species Act, according to the NOAA Fisheries Service. A decision to remove or kill the sea lions likely is a year or more away.
This isn't really about protecting endangered species though. It's about protecting fishermen's harvests. It's about preserving tasty fish for the dinner table.
If it was really about protecting the salmon, it would be illegal to catch and eat them, period. Instead we're going to forcibly remove sea lions from an area they've decided they want to be in and relocate them elsewhere, or kill them.
I bet the sea lions weren't represented or consulted when ESA protection was given to the salmon. They probably think the salmon are tasty and have no idea that they're "endangered". Still, ignorance of the law is no excuse...
I'm just surprised to find that ESA violations can potentially carry the death penalty.
Trackposted to Right Pundits, Outside the Beltway, A Blog For All, Right Truth, Big Dog's Weblog, Common Folk Using Common Sense, Stuck On Stupid, Cao's Blog, The Bullwinkle Blog, Jo's Cafe, Maggie's Notebook | Conservative Blog, Faultline USA, third world county, stikNstein... has no mercy, The Crazy Rants of Samantha Burns, and Right Voices, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.
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Socialism is democracy?
Published Wed, Jan 31 2007 2:55 PM
Technorati Tags: News and Politics
From the Associated Press via the Seattle Times:
CARACAS, Venezuela -- A Congress wholly loyal to President Hugo Chavez met at a downtown plaza today to give the Venezuelan leader authority to enact sweeping measures by presidential decree.
Hundreds of Chavez supporters wearing red -- the color of Venezuela's ruling party -- gathered the plaza, waving signs reading "Socialism is democracy!" as lawmakers read out the proposed bill giving the president special powers for 18 months to transform 11 broadly defined areas, including the economy, energy and defense.
Socialism is democracy? I thought that democracy meant giving people a choice, and letting them choose. No wonder so many communist and socialist nations use the words "Peoples" or "Democratic" in their names.
A final draft of the law shows Chavez will also be allowed to dictate unspecified measures to transform state institutions; reform banking, tax, insurance and financial regulations; decide on security and defense matters such as gun regulations and military organization; and "adapt" legislation to ensure "the equal distribution of wealth" as part of a new "social and economic model."
What's "new" about socialism? Venezuela is on the fast track to becoming yet another communist dictatorship. Who want's to be that 18 months will turn into "President for life"?
National Assembly President Cilia Flores said the special powers will enable Chavez to enact new laws that "will benefit the people, those who were excluded their whole lives. They are laws for inclusion and social justice."
In other words, the National Assembly is abdicating its powers to Chavez. When the executive branch enacts the law there's no reason for the legislative branch. With the track record of socialist dictatorships, you'd think the world would learn that they're a bad thing.
A few years ago, the left was saying that the people of Afghanistan and Iraq weren't "ready" for democracy. The left was proved wrong.
Sadly, it looks like the people of Venezuela aren't ready for it either. Or rather, they're ready for the left's new definition of democracy: socialism.
Trackposted to Right Pundits, Outside the Beltway, third world county, Faultline USA, The Crazy Rants of Samantha Burns, stikNstein... has no mercy, Right Truth, Common Folk Using Common Sense, Stuck On Stupid, Cao's Blog, The Bullwinkle Blog, Maggie's Notebook | Conservative Blog, Jo's Cafe, and Right Voices, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.
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Good news - bad news -- OTA Wednesday
Published Wed, Jan 31 2007 12:42 AM
Technorati Tags: Blogging
Blogger tip of the day: Use good anti-virus software, and scan regularly! I received what appeared to be a nasty note in my inbox today from one of my email providers. Looking at the message headers, it looked legitimate, but I couldn't be sure. There was an attachment you see, and the virus filters blocked it.
I have anti-virus software installed on all of my computers. I make sure it's updated on a daily basis, and I run an automated scan every night. Even so, this little bit of email put my teeth on edge, so I ran a deep scan on all of my machines, except one, and that one's turned off until I get a chance to run one on it too.
The good news is no infected files were found. The bad news is it took a few hours to run the scans. I think the good news outweighs the bad news. I'd hate to have my machines turned into zombie spam-bots after all, or even worse, lose the source code to my site.
Speaking of source, code, I spent some time tonight working on auto-discovery for trackback URIs so that I could automatically send trackback pings when I post. Once again, it's a case of good news and bad news.
The good news is, the code works. I tried it out on a few of my posts, and it dutifully crawled every link in the posts (the actual post content, not the sidebar and stuff). On the sites that I linked to that included the auto-discovery RDF it found the trackback URIs.
The bad news is, it takes a while to retrieve every page I link to when I use the blogger's oasis to participate in linkfests. Some blogs are fast and some are slow. Even so, when there's a lot of blogs the time adds up. Add that to the fact that not all the links are going to blog posts and the process takes even longer.
There's more mixed news though. About a third of the blogs I linked to actually have the auto-discovery RDF. Some of the best blogs (in my opinion, your mileage may vary) don't include it. Some others that I wouldn't expect to see it in do.
One blog maintains a permanent floating ping festival. That's pretty cool, except that the page for that one actually has about half a dozen different instances of the auto-discovery RDF. Not one of them matches the page's URI though, so I can't choose which one to use.
I guess I shouldn't complain though. Trackbacks are a service that bloggers provide as a favor to other bloggers. Nobody's required to support them, and the levels of support vary from platform to platform.
Heck, I'm grateful that people do provide them. They make it easy to network with other bloggers, and I think that that's cool. I especially like Ferdinand T. Cat's plan to rule the world through the blogosphere via the blogger's oasis.
Since I started participating in linkfests, I've seen a big jump in my site traffic. I think that's a cool thing because it means more people are reading my stuff.
One of the coolest things about the blogger's oasis is the linkfest chooser. This little gem makes it incredibly easy to find and connect to open trackback posts. Maybe even a little too easy.
One of my friends in the blogosphere commented on a post earlier this month that the linkfest chooser makes it easy to cheat on trackbacks. She said "You used to have to go to everyones site in order to TB..now u can cheat and link without even readin the post".
She's right you know. And to think... here I was trying to completely automate the trackback process from my end. At least I go out and read every post I link to. Now though, I do it after linking.
I also read every post that somebody links to one of mine and sends a ping for. Thanks to you all my Internet habit's getting serious. I find myself spending a couple of hours a night just reading all of your posts. I have to say, it's a lot of fun.
This is your open trackbacks post for Wedneday, January 31, 2007.
If you have something interesting you'd like to share, feel free to link it here and leave a trackback.
Just remember the trackback policy.
For the best exposure, go to the blogger's oasis and use the linkfest chooser to choose the posts you'd like to hook up with.
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