Some Occupy L.A. arrestees feel traumatized, might seek therapy
Sometimes reality sucks. Deal with it.
Some Occupy L.A. arrestees feel traumatized, might seek therapy
Sometimes reality sucks. Deal with it.
Tried to use mapquest this afternoon. It was very frustrating with various ad’s covering the images and map controls. Only a finance guy could screw the user experience up that badly.
Sussanah Breslin, a Forbes blogger writes on being diagnosed with breast cancer.
h/t to Instapundit.
Seems to me, if doctors quit, the cost of medical care will be going up. Of course, the government will pass a law to solve that problem.
The Obama administration and many local officials have said the U.S.-Mexican border is safer than ever and that reports of violence on the American side are wildly exaggerated. But the farmer scoffed at that argument. “I walk this soil every day and have since I was old enough to come out on my own,” he said. “In this part of Texas, it is worse than it’s ever been.”
What State? “If the solution to the state’s problems were higher taxes, we’d be living in Shangri-La already.”
The country these OWS supporters seem to desire is not one I would care to live in.
This about sums it up:
U.S. Cranes, LLC:‘Company Policy: We are not hiring until Obama is gone’
Looman made it clear, talking with 11Alive’s Jon Shirek, that he is not refusing to hire to make some political point; it’s that he doesn’t believe he can hire anyone, because of the economy. And he blames the Obama administration.
“The way the economy’s running, and the way my business has been hampered by the economy, and the policies of the people in power, I felt that it was necessary to voice my opinion, and predict that I wouldn’t be able to do any hiring,” he said.
He also received a visit from the Secret Service as some jerk reported him to the FBI as a threat to national security.
“The Secret Service left here, they were in a good mood and laughing,” Looman said. “I got the feeling they thought it was kind of ridiculous, and a waste of their time.”
From the release of the ClimateGate 2.0 e-mails…
“I can’t overstate the HUGE amount of political interest in the project as a message that the Government can give on climate change to help them tell their story,” a civil servant wrote to Phil Jones in 2009. “They want the story to be a very strong one and don’t want to be made to look foolish.”
Having elevated global warming to the most dramatic, urgent and over-riding issue of the day, bureaucrats, NGOs, politicians and funding agencies demanded that the scientists must keep the whole bandwagon rolling. It had become too big to stop.
“The science is being manipulated to put a political spin on it which for all our sakes might not be too clever in the long run,” laments one scientist, Peter Thorne. While Professor Jagadish Shukla, a lead IPCC author, IGES founder, and one of the most senior climate experts writes that, “It is inconceivable that policymakers will be willing to make billion-and trillion-dollar decisions for adaptation to the projected regional climate change based on models that do not even describe and simulate the processes that are the building blocks of climate variability.”
MORE from a supporter of the global warming hypothesis…
This was why the first Climategate caused such repercussions. The revelations came as little surprise to those few who follow state of temperature reconstructions, but they rocked supporters who had put their trust in climate scientists. Clive Crook, a believer in the manmade global warming hypothesis and supporter of carbon reduction measures, expressed it like this:
“The closed-mindedness of these supposed men of science, their willingness to go to any lengths to defend a preconceived message, is surprising even to me. The stink of intellectual corruption is overpowering.”
IT’S RELIGION NOT SCIENCE.
Boulderites, this might be a good time to re-read Clay Evans climate change editorial Evans: Global warming? We better believe it. One of Clay’s conclusions is:
Certainty is indeed hard to come by. But anyone who chooses to “believe” that global warming is, as one U.S. Senator has put it, a “hoax,” or at least that its dangers have been overblown, must also accept that they stand against science.
Trust the experts Clay, trust the experts. They have no agenda, no political pressure, no million dollar grants to bring in, no conferences in exotic places. No, only evil corporations have conflicts like this and the government is the protector and savior of the common folk.
At this point in time, let me repeat that GLOABAL WARMING IS A RELIGION NOT SCIENCE.
Geez, these Occupy dudes are such mature, outstanding citizens.
Too bad the Occupy movement’s cost to state and local governments is $13 million and counting.
What Else Is Wrong with Obamacare?
But no cost is too high for my liberal/progressive friends and acquaintances.
I used to think that Obamacare would work for a few years until the costs ran out of control and people’s benefits started being restricted. With the present budget situation and the evidence that it’s an untenable mass of rules and regulations I feel more and more confident it will sink under its own weight. That said, it would be much much better if it were repealed.
DHS issues Turkey fryer warning
Good grief. BUDGET CUT
Ann Althouse: On Huffpo and bad science.
HuffPo’s anti-science stance on health and medicine appears to be deliberately systematic and is unquestionably pervasive.
I’m sure there’s no room at the Inn for “global warming deniers”. Boulderites should feel at home over at Huffpo.
Right on the Left Coast: On the crests of the foothills at Altamont are almost 5000 wind turbines. Not one of them was turning that I could see. It was a semi-cloudy November day in the Bay Area and even if the wind was light, not one windmill was turning.
Coming soon to Boulder thanks to City electric power municipalization. Of course, Darren might have missed one or two as it’s pretty hard to look at 5,000 wind turbines at once!
Hey, you can’t make this stuff up.
Carter: It seems that a few people have a very strong say, and no matter how much talking goes on beforehand, the big decisions are made at the eleventh hour by a select core group.
Oh, what a surprise. More here and here.
Meanwhile, back at the ranch with the local paper which puts every pro climate change study on the front web page…
UN weather agency: Climate-changing gases skyrocket.
If the wind wasn’t blowing so damn hard, I’d go out on the deck put some coals in the Webber and just start it up for the heck of it.
h/t Instapundit.
John Hinderaker: We can’t say it enough: global warming alarmism is not science. It is politics at best, outright fraud at worst.
Beyond that handful of leading alarmists, if you are involved in any way in climate science, you have a financial interest in alarmism. Even minor climate scientists get consulting contracts and are invited to present papers in exotic locales. And if you are not an alarmist, you have little or no chance of cashing in on the billions of dollars in government grants for climate research. Essentially, the closed world of climate “science” has been bought and paid for, largely with our tax dollars. Under these circumstances, it is remarkable that so many real scientists have been willing to forgo financial advantage and blow the whistle on the alarmists’ frauds.
And let’s not forget Climage change guru James Hansen who seems to have an ethics problem:
It recently came out that James Hansen, one of the two or three most prominent global warming alarmists on whose work the IPCC reports rest, “forgot” to report $1.6 million in outside income, as required by his government contracts. Is that significant?
It’s a great religion, the problem is it’s funded with our tax dollars.
It brings to mind the old information ministries of the old Soviet Union or even Baghdad Bob assuring us that the Americans are about to be defeated as our troops are just a few hundred yards away.
One of journalisms finest moments.
When there is a conflict between jobs and public employee unions, or a conflict between jobs and the environmentalist lobby, jobs lose every time under this Administration; and that is the case even when the infrastructure around the jobs already exists, as in the Gulf. It’s the case even when the law is on the side of the workers, as in the Gulf.
How this President can claim that he’s interested in job-creation, or even job-maintenance, is simply beyond me.
The Gulf Permitoriam, and Obama’s Disregard for the Law
How so many people, especially liberals and progressives, can applaud this approach is beyond me. Of course, it’s easy to understand the City of Boulder supporting such strategy at any time. They need energy prices to skyrocket such that the green energy solutoins they propose an be viewed as close to competitive. Perhaps the City council and green energy supporters of municipalization should read about the 14,000 abandoned windmills.
Of course, the truth is that no cost is to high for the true zealots supporting municipalization.