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Archive for July 31st, 2009

July 31, 2009

Friday, July 31st, 2009
Really Good Quotes "A mind, once expanded by a new idea, never returns to its original dimensions." - Oliver Wendell Holmes



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Greetings, Quotaholics:

My sister is 6 years older than me. When she was a teenager I remember her and her friends talking about “reputation” a lot.

Back then everyone was concerned about their reputation. Even the Everly Brothers sang about it in their song “Wake Up Little Susie”. When the teens in the song discovered they had fallen asleep on the couch they sang “Our reputation is shot”.

By the time I was a teenager the ideal of reputation had changed some. To have been involved in sex was no longer the stigma that it had been during my sister’s youth, but the dual standard was alive and well. Guys wanted to date a tramp but marry a virgin.

These days it seems that teen sex is pretty much a fact of life. I don’t think most teens aspire to marry a virgin. As a matter of fact many people now work in the sex industry. From strippers to porn stars to prostitutes I would guess more people have a bad reputation these days than ever before.

But what happens to these people later in life? Many get out of the trade and go on to marry and have families. And for some their past life comes back to haunt them.

We have heard of teachers who lost their jobs when their past was reveled. A former Miss America was fired when nude pictures of her surfaced. Many Hollywood stars have had photos or films from their past resurface after they rose to stardom.

But what if a local politician was found to be married to a porn star? Well if he were in Florida apparently he gets fired.

According to an article in the New York Daily News, the Fort Myers Beach town council met in an emergency meeting and voted 5-0 to fire town manager Scott Janke "without cause" after it was learned that he was married to a former porn star who goes by the stage name Jazella Moore.

“(Mayor) Kiker acknowledged that Janke had violated no rules or laws and added that he had done a good job for the island town that had about 6,500 people, according to the 2000 Census. But the mayor was concerned whether Janke could remain effective and not distract the community from the business of the town along the state’s west coast.”

“‘At no time did we make a judgment call on the activities of Mr. Janke or his wife,’ Kiker told The Associated Press. ‘It’s a matter of how effective he becomes after this situation. How much disruption there is.’”

“‘Our heads are held high,’ Scott Janke said. ‘We have nothing to be embarrassed about. We’ve done nothing wrong.’”

Now a quick Google search for Jazella Moore turned up many links to photos and videos readily available on the internet. Once the secret was out it would be very easy for anyone to locate these. But does that constitute a distraction for the community? Does it affect Mr. Janke’s ability to do his job?

Do you think it’s right to fire someone because of what their spouse was involved in prior to their marriage? With so many people involved in sex related work these days, is it fair to assign them to a lower status for the rest of their lives? What about some young kid who foolishly gets caught up in something like this? Do they have any chance later in life?

Or do you think the city acted properly in firing Mr. Janke? Does his choice of a wife reflect upon his ability to do his job? Would his serving as city manager tarnish the reputation of the city? Do you believe that people in the sex industry are lower class and don’t deserve to mix with “proper” people?

What would you think if you found out that a friend or coworker was involved in something like this when they were younger?

Nothing in my closet

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Today's Quotes


“People who work sitting down get paid more than people who work standing up.” - Ogden Nash


“In the beginning the Universe was created. This has made a lot of people very angry and been widely regarded as a bad move.” - Douglas Adams

Today's Chuckle

Visit to the Cemetery

A man placed some flowers on the grave of his dearly departed mother and started back toward his car when his attention was diverted to another man kneeling at a grave.

The man seemed to be praying with profound intensity and kept repeating, “Why did you have to die? Why did you have to die?”

The first man approached him and said, “Sir, I don’t wish to interfere with your private grief, but this demonstration of pain is more than I’ve ever seen before. For whom do you mourn so deeply? A child? A parent?”

The mourner took a moment to collect himself, then replied, “My wife’s first husband.”

Life Sentences

“Columbus did not seek a new route to the Indies in response to a majority directive.”


“Concentrated power is not rendered harmless by the good intentions of those who create it.”


“Every friend of freedom must be as revolted as I am by the prospect of turning the United States into an armed camp, by the vision of jails filled with casual drug users and of an army of enforcers empowered to invade the liberty of citizens on slight evidence.” - all from Milton Friedman, born on this day in 1912
Image'n That

No. Not Even At Half The Price!

Most Embarrassing or Scary Moment


Speak Up!

Speak right up!



Diversity

We have all heard of army ants and how they live in a large cooperative nest. We have also heard how they raid the nests of other ants and take their food. I find it simply amazing that there are so many different types of ants, not that they compete as that is Nature’s way. Some ants cultivate their own food. Leaf Cutter Ants will take pieces of plant leaves they harvest, then use it as a base for the fungi they eat. Other ants, like bees, collect the food they need and store it in the catacombs of their nest.

But it isn’t just ants that are so diverse. I’ve already alluded to the vast scope of the different types of moths and butterflies. Select any type of insect and you can learn how many different types of that insect there are with a simple search. There are so many wasps, and a large array of bees. There are so many different kinds of flies that one would wonder how there is enough dung for them to feed on. There are spiders of every size and color, some who spin webs to trap their prey, and others that simply hunt and ambush for food.

One must not look simply at insects to see such diversity. Drop a hook into any large body of water and there’s a more than good chance you will land more than one type of fish. Some "fish" aren’t really fish at all. Whales and porpoises are mammals and do not have gills. They breathe air like we land-lubbers do. They just hold their breath longer. Consider that some fish can only live in salt water, and some can only live in fresh water. Heck, some "walk" across open land to get to the next puddle!

If you could glance upward while outside, there is a good chance that you would see one kind of bird or another within seconds, no matter where you live. From tiny hummingbirds to Andorran Condors, they come in various colors, feather patterns, and sizes. Just be careful when you are looking up. What goes up, must come down.

What is most amazing about this diversity isn’t that there are so many kinds. What I find amazing is that most will not breed outside of their type, and many couldn’t even if they wanted. Many living creatures very similar simply cannot produce viable offspring with any similar creature not like themselves. Homo Sapiens, however, have reversed this trend in nature.

With technology allowing humans to travel anywhere on the planet in just a few hours, we have found attraction in what was once geographical separation. Tribes living in some areas took on attributes similar to those around them as they interbred and what traits were helpful in their climate and environment. Now, we intermingle, merging the traits. It is estimated that this trend could create a singular human genus in only a few generations.

Here’s Your Quiz:
Have you noticed the vast array of different types of insects or animals?
What do you think is the largest diverse type of any one living being?
How many different types of grasses are in your yard?
Is the greatest diversity in plants or animals?

Diversity - Not Just Politically Correctness Gone Awry
Cliff (the High-Tech Redneck who doesn’t rate a fancy ’signature pic’)

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

“Do what we can, summer will have its flies.”
~ Ralph Waldo Emerson ~

Ahhh, summer! My favourite time of the year. Every year in February, I yearn for July. I long for the sun, the sweltering heat, and the opportunity to let my skin turn a healthy colour. Yeah, yeah, I know the dangers of spending too much time in the sun, but I cannot help it. I’m from Africa, a child of the summertime. At this time of the year, I feel myself coming out of a shell, much like a tortoise does after a rainstorm.

This year, however, I’ve had to keep my shell close at hand. This summer has not been the greatest. OK, let me rephrase that. So far, this summer has pretty much blown. It started off cold and wet, but that didn’t bother anyone unduly. The summers here usually start that way, and we endure it with the optimistic belief that the warm weather will soon be on its way. And sure enough, our first series of nice days arrived right on cue. Two days later, the nice days fled, not to be seen again for several weeks. And that’s pretty much what the summer has been like. Every now and then, we’ll get one or two hot, sunny days, just to taunt us. The rest of the time it’s cold and usually, rainy. I heard somewhere that Toronto is having its coldest summer in 17 years.

But what’s the point of complaining about it? A wise friend recently told me that people get more stressed than they need to when they get tense about things they have no control over. Last time I checked, I had not developed the ability to turn the sun on and off, or to conjure up the rain clouds whenever my back yard started to wilt. Therefore, instead of complaining, I am choosing to make the most of a cloudy situation. When you think about it, there are some saving graces about this summer.

For a start, it’s so much easier to be at work when the weather is bad. It may be true that the process of getting there is a little more painful (why is it that ten drops of rain is enough to make normally sensible drivers behave like complete idiots on the road?), but once you’re at work, you don’t mind being there so much. Since I changed jobs, I have moved to a different location at my place of work, and I am right beside a window. If I look out and see a gorgeous sunny day outside, I cannot help thinking that I would much rather be out there than in here. If it’s rainy, the extent of my weather-related thoughts is something along the lines of, “It’ll be a bitch getting home tonight.”

Then there’s my running. When it’s as hot as it is during a normal summer, there are only two times of the day when I can run: excruciatingly early in the morning, or when it’s so late in the evening that it’s starting to get dark. During the time between, the heat makes running next to impossible for everyone but the very brave or the very stupid. During a cool summer, my window of running opportunity is much broader. It is cool enough to go running at lunchtime, if I am so inclined. I can run in the middle of the morning or as soon as I get home from work. Just not when there’s a lightning storm.

And this year, there is a really big reason to grateful for the cool summer. The City of Toronto workers went on strike six weeks ago. This meant that many services came to a screeching halt, including garbage collection. A number of city parks were turned into temporary dumping sites. As they filled up, more parks were turned into dumps. As a result, the usually child-friendly, dog-walking neighbourhoods gradually turned into garbage zones. More and more people found themselves with mounds of rotting stuff almost in their back yards. While very few people have been enjoying the miserable summer, Toronto residents are united in their belief that if the strike had happened during a hot, humid summer, it would have been a lot stinkier, and a lot more hazardous to the general public’s health. (At the time of writing, the unions and the city are voting on a tentative deal, and the strike could be over as soon as tomorrow. By the time you read this, I will hopefully be seeing the welcome sight of city garbage trucks making their merry way around the neighbourhood).

So you see, if you look hard enough, you can find a silver lining in every cloud. I will still be grateful, however, when the clouds just go away.

Kaleidoscopically yours,
Kirsten

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Tim's Tales


I don’t feel like writing tonight. It was a long boring day doing monotonous work in Excel that I should be able to do with a program. But our new system is “advanced”. Next thing you know Microsoft will have me using a slide-rule again.

So I got home, tired and weary. I grabbed a beer and turned on my monitor. I leave my computer running all the time because I Fold. Our Team is doing pretty good, but we could use some more help. That is, if you’re interested in saving lives.

What was interesting to me is that Microsoft decided to reboot my computer with the Vista updates. At 3:00 a.m., it gave me the option of waiting until later, or letting them take care of it. I had five minutes to decide before Bill rebooted. I was asleep, so Bill rebooted.

I found that out at around 4:30 p.m. today. My version of Folding doesn’t work unless I’m logged in.

But what really got me was when I logged in. I was informed there was a Windows Vista update available. “This could take some time.” it warned. My computer is faster than my car, so I figured, what the hell. I downloaded the 300+ MB that Microsoft wanted me to download and then it asked me if I wanted to install the update. Again, I was warned that “this could take some time”. So that went merrily along for a while, then it said it was done and it wanted to reboot. I figured what the hell, be done with it. So I clicked OK.

I got a message saying it was installing updates. Umm, I thought you already installed them? Then I rebooted, and it installed more updates and wanted to reboot again. I said OK again, and it was busy installing updates until it finally stopped and rebooted to finish installing the updates.

By the time I could write (some 3 hours later), I didn’t feel like it, and I probably couldn’t even get my piece in on time if I tried.

Blame Bill Gates. Tell him I liked Unix just fine. Sorry to disappoint.

Tim a’Musing
Having a Ball with Yarns

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Tip of the Day


Deep-Frying Tips

Avoid crowding food that is deep-fat-fried. The food must be surrounded by bubbling oil, and you must keep the temperature from falling too much. If you add too much food to a small amount of oil, the temperature will plummet, and the food will wind up greasy and soggy.

Poet-Tree


Rebecca, once you start you aren’t allowed to stop.  Come back!
 
Next opening line…
On the chest of a barmaid at Yale…

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

Our poets are really first rate—
it is because they stay up late—
they’re better by far,
nearly good as the Bard
and their words are always worth the wait. - Cassandra in New York
Our poets are really first rate
Except when out on a date
Each question they pose
In rhymes, not in prose
Tends to make their companions irate. - Bonnie
(Mike: If I am nude in the fountain, I tend to hang out all over!)
Our poets are really first rate
Making words to rhyme has been their fate
But maybe I’m just dense
Their lines oft make no sense. . .
Those limericks are hard to create. - E. Cole Aye
Our poets are really first rate
Even when they’re given a clean slate
They’ll, with their dirty mind,
Always a way to find
A rhyme about wanting to procreate. - E. Cole Aye
Our poets are really first rate
Their talent I would not berate
Let me give you advice:
To them you should be nice
Or with their lawyer you’ll litigate. - E. Cole Aye
Our poets are really first rate
So to their craft we should donate
So this is my plea
Send all your cash to me -
Or at least five dollars times eight. - E. Cole Aye
Our poets are really first rate……
Appetites they do sate…….
For rhymes and prose……..
Even those……
Who are Johnnies come late. - Skeeter
Our poets are really first rate……
Guess it was caused by fate…….
‘Cause most of the time…….
When making it rhyme……
It’s posted by the due date. - Skeeter
Our poets are really first rate…..
But I wouldn’t say great…….
Though I have lots of fun….
Trying to pun…….
Bad limericks I create. - Skeeter
Our poets are really first rate……
Like my very first date……….
Though I can’t recall………
Her name at all………
She sealed my very fate. - Skeeter

Our poets are really first rate……
Folks you never can hate……
Love them we must……..
Lo, not with lust……
Even he of bald pate. - Skeeter
Our poets are really first rate.
They’re rhyming right out of the gate.
Rebecca is new,
Skeeter writes quite a few,
in all everyone is just great!  - Mike

Reader Comments

Re: Marriage

For my wife and I, remarrying and a long marriage are a great benefit to health, both physical and mental. Eleven days ago, we got "remarried" - for the 22nd time in 22 years in 22 different states. (This year we shared our vows with a skunk, opossum, some deer, and a bob cat and bulldog who wrestled at our feet.) Finding a way to constantly renew your relationship is a tool that anyone can use. (By the way, in all of our time together, our only "disagreement" is over whose name goes first — we alternate each year on our wedding certificate.) -
T.I.M.



What a load of bunkum that study is!! My dad’s folks were married fifty years, my grandfather lived to the ripe old age of 84 and his wife died at about 72, and his parents were the same. My mom’s folks divorced and both lived to their 70’s with my grandfather remarrying. My parents divorced, my dad lived to be 65 and my mom is still going strong at 73, and she still works since she has no income. Both remarried, my stepdad died at about 59 and my stepmother is 80-something.

I’ve been married 31 years and we both have bad health from years of being poor and unable to take care of ourselves from the economic situation that was usually going on. My five siblings have all been divorced and remarried multiple times and most of them are in pretty good health, though it does seem to be the ones who have found long term partners and no or few children.

I think it’s children, worrying about them, feeding them right, taking care of them that takes a toll on people’s health in relationships, since most of us still sacrifice a great deal for our children. It’s so deeply ingrained in us as a species that we can’t help it. I didn’t say all of us, mind, just most of us. Marriage and economic status have a far bigger factor on a person’s health, to me they are intertwined as they both seem to affect one another. - Ruth in WA



Patti, my mom and dad were divorced when I was young.  They both remarried, although my mom is now a widow.  My dad was 82 when he died and my mom is currently 81.  My dads parents were married for over 60 years and lived to be 87 and 102.   Both my grandparents, on my dads side, were in good health up to the end, but my father was pretty ill the last few years of his life. My mother suffers from several health problems including diabetes, but at 81 she has had a longer life than her parents or sisters all of whom remained married for life.  So I think there is more to this than if you only married once.

Of course as the saying goes "Married men don’t really live longer. It only seems like it". - Mike



Re: Cliff’s Moths

The attraction of light for moths is quite straightforward. They navigate by the moon. Seeing an artificial light, they try to keep a constant bearing on it, which produces a circular flight path. Presumably, evolution will get this sorted out if civilization persists. The first heat-seeking missile ignored a convenient drone target and headed straight for the sun.

Moths have a higher wing loading than butterflies, and so are less affected by wind, although the erratic flight of a butterfly may also be the result of a brain that stopped growing when marginally effective at navigation, but still retained random elements for evasive action and search functions. I was amazed to see a moth with a 4" wingspan once, which was readily identified by a west coast naturalist, but I can’t find her answer now. In daytime, I usually only see small moths that I disturb. -
Bob of the North



My paternal grandmother was 102 when she passed away, my father called me, up north at the cabin we rented for the Minnesota fishing opener, to give me the news. As he was telling me a Luna moth landed right under the bright deck light. Odd thing is this moth was my grandmothers favorite. It was like she paid me one last visit to say goodbye. Laura in Minneapolis



Re: Patriotism

We too often put Patriotism and Rights together when they are very different things. When I was a kid, my father taught us that the Constitution of the United States gave us the RIGHT to do just about anything we want, as long as it doesn’t interfere with someone else’s right to do what they want to do. He was speaking about neighbors and how we all interacted on our own property. We kept our noise in our yard, as well as our toys, but we had a neighbor who had no idea how to put her car in reverse and back out of her driveway, so she simply drove straight ahead and made our backyard into a semi-circular driveway to get to the street. After she had driven through my mom’s laundry hanging on clotheslines, Dad put up a fence. She drove through it. The next fence was much stronger. Steel posts! After that, her husband would turn her car around and back it into their own driveway so the lady could drive straight out. One evening he forgot. We watched her do the funniest thing I’ve ever seen anyone do with a car. In an attempt to turn it around in her own yard, she got it stuck sideways inside their double garage. It took a tow truck to get the car out.
I wish people realized how their actions impose on the rights of other people to NOT hear someone else’s music choice booming across the back yard or blaring from car stereos, to be able to sleep when someone a block away decides to shoot off fireworks illegally an hour after you go to bed, to stop at a corner behind the stop-here-line and hold your breathe when someone talking on a cell phone sweeps around the corner and almost takes your bumper off. (and then she had the gall to give ME a glare and the finger! as though I had been in the wrong!) and stuff like that. I think I’ve figured out why people do that - they don’t know how to use their brake to slow their car down before making a left turn, or they’re so focused on the phone conversation it never occurs to them to slow before turning. Wonder what those folks would do if they had to use both feet to drive (as in clutch-brake-gas pedals). Nancy L in Ohio




Re: Tip of the Day

Personally–I’d use some other oil than Canola, like a light Olive oil. Canola was used for food, but was more useful as a machine lubricant since it mixed with water without dissolving. It has compounds that have an unpleasant taste and can give you an upset stomach. Many restaurants use it in their fryers now because it’s cheaper than other oils and supposedly healthier. We can always tell which ones because eating the fries will make my husband and son sick. Here’s a link to the Wikipedia article on it:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canola_oil - Ruth in WA



User Submission

From Tim (Not Tim’s Tales Tim)
"My dad used to put it another way: Never put another man in a corner where the only way out is over you." - Joe Biden in the Wall Street Journal

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