If you intresting in sport buy steroids you find place where you can find information about steroids

Archive for November 28th, 2008

November 28, 2008

Friday, November 28th, 2008
Really Good Quotes "A mind, once expanded by a new idea, never returns to its original dimensions." - Oliver Wendell Holmes
Submit Reader Comment Submit 15 Minutes of Fame Submit Image or Quote Submit to Best of RGQ Submit Tip of the Day Submit Limerick


Greetings, Quotaholics:


One of the protections under our Constitution is the protection from illegal search and seizure. What this means to us, very simply put, is that the police can’t stop you at random in an attempt to find some reason to arrest you.

In reality I suspect that the police do this all the time.

A few months ago, I got pulled over on my way to work. I have an old, rusted, 1987 Dodge Lancer. The car is not old enough to be an antique, just old enough to be junk! I keep it licensed and insured so I can still drive it mainly because I like it. I’m holding on to it until, (A) It becomes old enough to be considered antique and (B) I have enough money to restore it.

One morning I decided to drive the Lancer to work and passed a state trooper who was going the opposite direction. About a ½ mile later I changed lanes and looked in my rearview mirror to see the blue lights come on.

The officer told me he had pulled me over because I didn’t signal when I changed lanes. Now I know I did. I always do. I believe the reason he pulled me over was because he figured a rusty old Dodge like mine couldn’t possibly be legally licensed and insured.

If the officer had seen anything in my car that he could charge me with, it would have been my word against his that he really had no reason to pull me over. If I could prove he had no cause, any evidence he had of a bigger crime would have been thrown out because it was illegally obtained.

At least that’s the way the law has always been interpreted. An article I saw on the CBS13 website however seems to indicate that this interpretation has changed, at least in California.

A 2001 traffic stop by a Sutter County, California sheriff’s deputy is at the heart of a recent California Supreme Court decision upholding the conviction of a man on drug charges.

The deputy claimed he made the stop because he suspected something was wrong with the car’s registration. Bruce Brendlin, who was riding in the car was arrested when the officer found equipment used to make methamphetamine in his possession.

According to the article, “Brendlin challenged his conviction and four-year prison sentence, arguing that the drug evidence should have been suppressed at trial because it was found as the result of an illegal stop. The state had since conceded there was no basis to stop the car.”

As it turned out, Brendlin had an outstanding warrant. The state argued that he was searched only after the officer recognized him and discovered the warrant.

“‘Despite the unlawfulness of the initial traffic stop, the facts of this encounter demonstrate that the drug paraphernalia found … was not the fruit of the unlawful seizure,’ Justice Marvin Baxter wrote for the court. ‘The police searched defendant’s person and the vehicle only after they discovered a valid outstanding warrant for his arrest.’”

“And even though the deputy would not have learned of the warrant if it hadn’t been for the illegal stop, the deputy had acted ‘in the absence of purposeful or flagrant police misconduct’ in pulling over the car.”

It really sounds, to me, like the officer got lucky in that Brendlin had a warrant. After that he could claim to have recognized Brendlin and had reason for the search.

Does this ruling in any way erode our protection from illegal search and seizure? Since the state admits that the initial stop was illegal, should Brendlin have been convicted? Do you think it’s common for the police to stop people and see what they can find to charge them with? Do you think this decision will make illegal stops more common?

Legally stopping,




P.S. Since Bruce is turning the Limericks and comments over to Patti and I, I’d like to ask your help. Bruce knew how most of you wanted your submissions signed. Unfortunately, Patti and I don’t. Please make sure to sign your submissions the way you want them to be published. We usually use a first name and location. If you could include this it would be a big help. Thanks!



Isn’t it worth $1 a month to you to keep RGQ going?  Please click the link and direct your contribution to reallygoodquotes@gmail.com.


Today's Quotes


"Lead, follow, or get the hell out of the way – Anonymous

 

"A truth that’s told with bad intent
Beats all the lies you can invent.” - William Blake

Today's Chuckle

A Wise Jurist
[Thanks to Bonnie in Louisiana]

Several women appeared in court, each accusing the others of causing the trouble they were having in the apartment building where they lived.

The women were arguing noisily even in the court.

The judge, banging his gavel to quiet them, said, "We are going to do this in an orderly manner. I can’t listen to all of you at once. I’ll hear the oldest first."

The case was dismissed for lack of testimony.

Life Sentences


"Liberty has never come from the government. Liberty has always come from the subjects of the government. The history of government is a history of resistance. The history of liberty is the history of the limitation of government, not the increase of it.” - Woodrow Wilson

 

"Humble people don’t think less of themselves, they think of themselves less. – Anonymous


"Ideals are like stars: you will not succeed in touching them, but like the seafaring man, they are your guides, and following them you will reach your destiny.” - Carl Shurz


Image'n That

New Louisiana Quarter

Imp-Revised News

E-Mail the Imp


For this article, let us assume that there is no danger of either global warming or a new Ice Age creeping up on us. We can assume that local changes being caused by the changing weather patterns will continue slowly. Desert areas will get bigger, drought areas will slowly become desert areas, and new areas will begin to experience heavy rains and monsoons.

We can also assume that the world population will increase, thereby making land available for living and raising both agricultural crops and livestock increasingly scarce. That makes the majority of the Earth’s surface, water, the next area for building cities and manufacturing facilities.

Over the years there have been many proposals for building habitats on the sea floor and afloat. There have been many drawbacks. Cost. Technology. Public interest. The latest brainchildren all are problematical due to the same stumbling blocks of the past, but the incentive to succeed is getting stronger. I have no doubt but that one day we’ll see some sort of a “Water World” society.

There are plans for floating power stations that will probably be built long before we have floating cities and that makes sense to me. Even a modestly sized floating “city” will need a lot of power to operate 24/7, and it wouldn’t be practical to rely on conventional fossil fuel electrical generation stations. Combining wind, solar, wave, and tidal generation techniques together makes sense. Get that perfected to provide power to coastal cities and you can start to build cities around them at sea.

One of the drawbacks of a floating city would be supplying it and getting people on and off to work. The Dutch have plans for floating houses that are connected to the shore allowing easy access to everything ashore but taking up no land mass. Build a floating power plant attached to the shore connected with a causeway and build floating houses around it and you’ll eventually have a floating village.

Eventually there could be massive floating cities that are powered and can sail around the world. That’s where my “What if” kicks in. If you have a floating city connected to the shore by a causeway, part of the country it’s connected to. Makes sense, since it’s within that country’s territorial waters. But what about a 3000’ (915 meter) long, 1000’ (305 meter) wide, ship with 100 deck levels. Sailing around 200 miles (322) from shore would put it in international waters. Could the owners declare it a sovereign nation? If there were ten similar ships, could they all be separate countries? What about their territorial waters, would the same distances be recognized for them as for regular solid ground countries? Two ships passing in the night, violating each other’s territorial waters, would that be an act of war?

If a floating city claimed a 200 mile (322 KM) territorial limit, and stayed stationary in a prime oceanic fishing area, could they charge fees for fishing in what used to be international waters?

If a floating city can claim to be a sovereign nation, what could a land based country do? Could they tether floating cities every 50 miles (80 KM) from shore to extend their territorial limits? Could landlocked countries, like Switzerland, create their own oceanic territories by tethering floating cities in the ocean?

Would there be international laws on what size a floating ship or platform has to be before it could be considered as a sovereign nation? After all, it wouldn’t be too good an idea for any tramp steamer or cobbled up sea-going barge to become a country.

The Bad Sied

Most Embarrassing or Scary Moment


Speak Up!

Speak right up!

Patti's Parenthetical Past

On this day in history, November 28, 1942: An overcrowded nightclub in Boston burns. The Cocoanut Grove had recently been remodeled and now had a new lounge opening off the main floor. The club had the capacity to entertain 460 patrons. There were about 1,000 people there on this cold November night. The restaurants, bars, and lounges in both the basement and on the main floor were decorated in the style of Casablanca, a Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman film released only two days earlier in New York City.

Waiters tried to extinguish the blaze that started at 10:15 PM. It quickly spread as the flames roared up the stairway and a fireball burst across the central dance floor. The fire continued to rapidly spread to an adjacent bar and into the new lounge. Within five minutes, the main clubroom was an inferno as well. Panicked patrons tried to escape. The main exit was a single revolving door which was soon jammed by bodies on both sides. Other doors opened inwards and as the crush of bodies surged toward them, they were unable to be opened. The fire left 492 people dead.



"Everybody panicked. I knew there was a door across the dining room, but about 150 people were headed for it, and everybody was pressed together, arms jammed to our sides." - John Rizzo, fire survivor




"At the Cocoanut Grove, people did not respond intelligently. Some watched flames cross the ceiling, and it was not until one person started upstairs that others did. Even then, a hat-check girl wanted people to pay for coats. The way to overcome this is to teach people how to react to fear." - Dr. Anne Phillips



"I wish I’d died with the others in the fire." - Barney Welansky, club owner


Kids' Weird Words, The Date from Hell, How I Met My Mate
Kirsten's Krazy Kaleidoscope

 

Email Kirsten

Christof: I know you better than you know yourself.
Truman: You never had a camera in my head!

~ The Truman Show ~

Being on a reality TV show must be very disconcerting. I mean, there you are on Survivor, running like hell as you try to catch a chicken with your bare hands, and you have a cameraman jogging right along next to you, trying to position his boom microphone two inches from your face. Or you’re on The Apprentice or Hell’s Kitchen, knowing that there are cameras in your room as you get ready for bed.

I know I would never last for long on one of these shows, because I am quite protective of my privacy. I don’t want TV crews to see me before I’ve brushed my hair in the morning. I don’t want to worry about whether I’m being spied on in the bathroom, and I don’t want the whole world to be privy to my personal conversations. Add to that my aversion to eating bugs or standing on one leg in the blazing sun for seven hours, and you have a very bad “reality” candidate.

At least I get to choose, though. No-one is forcing me to be on reality TV against my will, unlike that poor soul, Truman Burbank. True, Mr. Burbank is a fictional character, but The Truman Show is a movie that many people found very thought-provoking. It is about a guy who, unbeknownst to him, is having his whole life broadcast on live television. Every single aspect of his life has been artificially engineered, from his job and hometown to his marriage and friends.

This movie seems to have been such a phenomenon that it has had a mental condition named after it. An increasing number of people are reporting to their therapists that they believe themselves to be the unwitting participants in a reality TV show. The Truman Syndrome is having a variety of consequences for the people experiencing it. Some report being proud of their TV star status, but more are creeped out by it. In extreme cases, people have planed to commit sucide if the cameras didn’t stop filming them. To most of us, this all sounds kind of fantastical, but to the people living through it, it is probably extremely frightening.

The Truman Syndrome may be new, but it is a manifestation of something that has been around since the beginning of time: psychotic delusions. People suffering from such conditions as schizophrenia frequently report feelings of grandiosity or paranoia. Depending on the age, psychiatric patients have believed themselves to be God, Napoleon Bonaparte, the Queen, Einstein. Now they believe that the entire world is watching them through the medium of TV. If the reality craze ever abates, the delusions could well mutate to another new form.

Uh oh. Is that a camera? Is it watching me? Shhhh. Don’t tell anyone where I am or what I’m saying…

Kaleidoscopically yours,
Kirsten


Tim's Tales

I’m nice. I know I’m nice because I haven’t killed that many stupid people yet. But at times, I’ve wanted to. That’s when I have to rely on my “I’m smarter than you are” defense mechanism.

Please allow me to explain. I got an e-mail from a student, and I’m going to post it here for clarity:

I have now been trying for an entire week to register for one class. The first problem a week ago was that after working a 9 hour day, then sitting thru a 3 hour class, I had to watch an hour long tutorial on how to register for a class. That is an unreasonable amount of time to ask a working adult student to spend just to register for a class. Please, just list the steps! Now I can’t log in at 6:46 pm on Tuesday night. I’ve used the correct password and ID user name. What is the problem with this system?

Edmond wasn’t particularly happy with me. I felt his pain, and responded with:

Hi Edmond.

I apologize for any inconveniences. We are all working hard to find and fix all the bugs in the new system.

The problem is, from what you have told me, you don’t exist in our system.

Please e-mail me from your college e-mail account, and I’ll get back to you as soon as I have a solution.

Thank you for your patience.

That was nice of me, wasn’t it? I thought it was friendly, but I’m really friendly, so I went one step further, and contacted Edmond’s wife, who happens to be registered for classes and forgot her password before she sent off that bitch session using her husband’s e-mail address.

Apparently someone has tried to access your account. As a security precaution, I have reset your password to the last 6 digits of your SSN. You will be required to change your password the first time you log in. Your new password has to be 6-9 characters long and a mix of letters and numbers.

I’m sorry for this inconvenience, but feel that your security is of utmost importance.

Linda [her advisor, not Linda’s real name], can you check her records for me? There was no breach, just an attempted breach. I do not want this to affect her academic career.

I think lying to me is a felony (yes, really). The training video is only half an hour long.

Tim a’Musing
Having a Ball with Yarns

Tip of the Day

Thaw frozen meat and poultry in the refrigerator and not on the kitchen counter where bacteria can grow. - Peggy in Tonawanda, New York

Poet-Tree


Kind of light with that line.  Maybe everyone was too busy with Thanksgiving.  Lucky for us we have some day after Thanksgiving limericks from Anne Onimous.


Next opening line…
On black Friday the one thing I’ll buy…

Hints:  Here’s a great new rhyming/composition tool.  http://www.writerhymes.com/
There’s also a great rhyming dictionary at http://www.rhymezone.com/
Limerick rules.  http://freespace.virgin.net/merrick.sheldon/limerickrules.htm 

Submit Opening Line
Submit Limerick

I was dreamed that I was a queen
Of the dubiously wonderful Silver Screen.
But instead of an award
For being so adored,
I found that my movies had never been seen. - Bonnie in LA
I once dreamed that I was a queen.. .
And the best that ever was seen
I did it one fine day
Walked a long fashion runway
Too bad it was just Halloween. - Lola 
The day after Thanksgiving I found
The size of my bank account going down
With all the sales galore
Saving dough is a chore
Even if shopping stopped, the account won’t rebound. – Anne Onimous
The day after Thanksgiving I found
A sweet, loving mutt at the pound!
My face she did lick
And me she did pick –
The most loyal love you will find around! – Anne Onimous
The day after Thanksgiving I found
I came up with a thought quiet sound!
I could save lots of money
If I and my lovely honey
Leisurely stay in bed and mess around! – Anne Onimous
The day after Thanksgiving I found
The only Play Station® around.
Imagine my great glee
When I won it for free
So homeward bound I did abound– Anne Onimous
The day after Thanksgiving I found
That sadly my in-laws were inbound.
Foolishly I opened my lips
Something nasty I let slip
My wife to my head she did crown. – Anne Onimous
The day after Thanksgiving I found
The lines at the store did surround
Everybody was in a rush
And all I wanted to crush
For as tight as a drum I was wound. – Anne Onimous
The day after Thanksgiving I found
A stereo with great sound
With a loud woofer and tweeter
And a very powerful receiver
It made a great sound in the surround! – Anne Onimous
The day after Thanksgiving I found
To the stores I quickly did bound.
Even though money I did bring
I still couldn’t buy anything
The crowds at the store, they did surround. – Anne Onimous
The day after Thanksgiving I found
Had no money, not even a Pound
None to pay the rent
Not even one cent
At home my sorrows I did drown. – Anne Onimous
The day after Thanksgiving I found
An old book that was very profound.
Intelligence it had great proclivity
For it was about the Theory of Relativity
With thoughts of great creativity.
It was by Einstein, a scientist most renowned. – Anne Onimous (I know not a true limerick, but still I thought creative)

Reader Comments


Re: Teenaged Sex Offenders

I won’t bore you with my well known views on the * ! @ gov’ment. However, I can think of 3 of my clients who are victims of the stupid sex offender registry. Why would I say "stupid"? Someone out there, not a regular "rgq" reader already has their mouth in that constipated look judges get when they are about to get self righteous or intolerant. Think of this, the purpose of the law is to protect kids. Now, there is no way of knowing whether you are living next to a true violent pervert or a randy former teen-ager. I can think of 3 of my cases, one of which went to jail, who were 18 and whose dates were almost 15. The sex was consentual in all cases. Its just that the little girl whined to mommy and daddy when boyfriend made her mad. I have another guy who was charged with rape because he had oral sex with his retarded 35 year old step-daughter. He wasn’t much smarter then her. The police in their usual slime ball way tricked a confession out of him. His ex-wife even admitted that she never would have reported him if he hadn’t been divorcing her sorry butt. ! * @ gov’ment! - Lucille



Re: Bye Bye Bruce

We’ll really miss you Bruce–it’s been a great zine! I’m glad you’ll at least be around to contribute some. Having the two different "voices" to open each issue has made for a great deal of thought in my case–even though I read and don’t always comment. - Ruth in WA



So sorry to see you go on a regular basis. You started a truly wonderful forum for us all. I enjoy it greatly. I wish you good luck on your patent(s) and whatever else your mind comes up with. I will keep enjoying RGQ and its unique citizenry as usual. Thanks, Bonnie



Gosh Bruce, I’m saddened that you won’t be at the helm of RGQ anymore but I wish you all the success in the world on all your endeavors! I’ve got a huge folder of quotes that I’ve collected from this site over the years. I certainly appreciate you sharing them with us. And I especially appreciate the time you’ve taken to respond to me personally on issues of politics and civil rights. Please keep us posted on the progress of your invention. - Joe from California
[Thanks, Joe. I’ll keep you all apprised of my progress. Please stay in touch.]



Reader Submissions

If you go to this web site, www.LetsSayThanks.com you can pick out a thank you card and Xerox will print it and it will be sent to a soldier that is currently serving in Iraq . You can’t pick out who gets it, but it will go to a member of the armed services. How AMAZING it would be if we could get everyone we know to send one!!! It is FREE and it only takes a second.

Wouldn’t it be wonderful if the soldiers received a bunch of these? Whether you are for or against the war, our soldiers over there need to know we are behind them. This takes just 10 seconds and it’s a wonderful way to say thank you. Please take the time and please take the time to pass it on for others to do. We can never say enough thank you’s.

Thanks for taking to time to support our military!

"May No Soldier Go Unloved"

Remember Today’s SOLDIER is Tomorrow’s VETERAN. - Peg in Pennsylvania




Cellular regeneration. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qxhi4Q8EDTU Amazing! - Tammy in Alabama


This lady has changed her habit of how she lists her names on her mobile phone after her handbag was stolen. Her handbag, which contained her cell phone, credit card, wallet… etc…was stolen.. 20 minutes later when she called her hubby, from a pay phone telling him what had happened, hubby says ‘I received your text asking about our Pin number and I replied a little while ago.’

When they rushed down to the bank, the bank staff told them all the money was already withdrawn. The thief had actually used the stolen cell phone to text ‘hubby’ in the contact list and got hold of the pin number. Within 20 minutes he had withdrawn all the money from their bank account.

Moral of the lesson: Do not disclose the relationship between you and the people in your contact list. Avoid using names like Home, Honey, Hubby, Sweetheart, Dad , Mom, etc….. And very importantly, when sensitive info is being asked through texts, CONFIRM by calling back!!

Also, when you’re being text by friends or family to meet them somewhere, be sure to call back to confirm that the message came from them. If you don’t reach them, be very careful about going places to meet ‘family and friends’ who text you.

Along with that if you have an entry called ‘Home’ with your actual home phone number it’s not too hard to do a reverse lookup on the number to find the address. now the robber has your home number, keys, AND address.

PLEASE PASS THIS ON! I never thought about THAT! - Brae



Submit Reader Comment Submit 15 Minutes of Fame Submit Image or Quote Submit to Best of RGQ Submit Tip of the Day Submit Limerick

Disclaimer- All quotes printed in this publication are believed to be accurately attributed, but no guarantees are made that some incorrectly attributed, or even outright false quotes won’t get in here from time to time.  I assure readers that I will do my best to weed out incorrect quotes, and will print a retraction as soon as I become aware of any errors.

Click here
to see the archives of past issues, or go to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/reallygoodquotes/messages. If you run across something really outstanding when perusing the archives, I’d appreciate it if you’d mail me at TheBestOfRGQ@yahoo.com and point it out to me.  I’m in the process of compiling an e-book called, not surprisingly, The Best of RGQ, and I’d like to hear from you which pieces impacted you the most.

Questions? Comments? Want to contribute a joke or a quote or an image? Feel free to e-mail at reallygoodquotes@gmail.com. We’d love to hear from you! We’ll even publish your comments, if they make any sense!

If you’d like to receive RGQ by email, please send a blank e-mail to reallygoodquotes-subscribe@yahoogroups.com

We can’t imagine why you’d want to, but if you choose to unsubscribe, please send a blank e-mail to reallygoodquotes-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com. Should you choose to unsubscribe, please e-mail us and tell us why. We listen to what people say, even if they’re leaving us.