In 19 officially dry aboriginal communities in the Northern Territory, the dark-brown yeast-based spread is reportedly being purchased in bulk to produce homebrew.
Australian Government Concerned Over Vegemite’s Use In Moonshine : The Two-Way : NPR
In 19 officially dry aboriginal communities in the Northern Territory, the dark-brown yeast-based spread is reportedly being purchased in bulk to produce homebrew.
Australian Government Concerned Over Vegemite’s Use In Moonshine : The Two-Way : NPR
Hillary’s unfavorable rating:

C’mon Boulderites, get off the Bernie Sander’s bandwagon and support the “chosen one.”
Glenn Reynolds: Nullifying juries more interested in justice than some prosecutors
Judges and prosecutors know this. But they don’t want jurors to know it, which is why we occasionally see cases like this one, in which jury-information activist Mark Iannicelli was arrested and charged with “jury tampering” for setting up a small booth in front of a Denver courthouse labeled “Juror Info” and passing out leaflets. Putting up a sign and passing out leaflets sounds like free speech to me, but apparently Denver District Attorney Mitch Morrissey feels differently.
Having been on a jury, it’s an intimidating situation. However, it’s important for everyday citizens to step up and be willing to shut down run-away prosecutors as well as idiotic laws that make no sense.
LEAVE BOCO OUT – Received the email below today and according to the authors, the City of Boulder will take over all Xcel property in both the City and County. I have quickly browsed through Boulder’s PUC petition, Proceeding No. 15A-0589E, and the separation boundaries are not clear from that document. I’ll do more research and report back. I’ll also upload the petition, but it’s too late and I’m too tired to do it now.
LEAVE BOCO OUT
Leave BoCo Out is a new organization formed by Boulder County residents to oppose the effort by the City of Boulder to condemn all facilities serving City and County customers of Xcel (down to and including the meters on our houses). We need your support.
Leave BoCo Out has hired Ray Gifford, an attorney with Wilkinson Barker Knauer, LLP, and a former Chairman of the Colorado Public Service Commission, to represent the organization. Ray will represent us before the Colorado Public Service Commission to oppose Boulder’s application to take these assets and turn county residents for all practical purposes into customers of the Boulder city utility. Boulder filed its PUC petition, Proceeding No. 15A-0589E, and it is available through the Commission’s website at www.colorado.gov/dora/puc. (See bottom of post – Ed)
County residents have been left out of the municipalization process from the very beginning. We had no vote in Boulder’s decision to create a municipal utility. We were first told by Boulder that we would not be included in its utility’s service territory. Then, Boulder said it would include County residents as customers. In yet another about-turn, we now find out from Boulder’s application that in fact Boulder wants to take all of the wires, poles and meters that serve County residents and have Xcel “wheel” power back to us. In effect, County residents would be customers of Xcel in name only. All service would be provided by Boulder. Any repairs would be done by Boulder. System reliability would be the responsibility of Boulder. And yet, Boulder admits it has no idea how much it will cost to serve County customers through its proposed arrangement with Xcel.
Leave BoCo Out is asking for your support. If you agree with our position, send an email to leavebocoout@outlook.com. If you would like to contribute, send a check payable to Leave BoCo Out, PO Box 11125, Boulder, CO 80301.
Carolyn Buck Charles Danaher David W. Smith
John B. Irons, Jr.
Judge Richard Posner compares police action to Keystone Kops.
Excerpt:
to repeat for emphasis, the police acted unreasonably and precipitately in flash banging the house without a minimally responsible investigation of the threats. The open network expanded the number of possible threateners and just one extra day of surveillance, coupled with a brief investigation of Murray…should have been sufficient to reassure the police that there were no dangerous men lurking in the house.
Say it ain’t so – Lois Lerner’s lost IRS email shows agency tried to block congressional scrutiny: watchdog – Washington Times
It’s great to find the “smoking gun,” but IRS targeting is not news to anyone who has been paying attention. Perhaps Progressives should learn how to pay attention.
Regarding the “lost” emails:
The IRS took routine steps to try to recover the emails but reported that it was unable to do so.
But the agency’s independent inspector general said it was able to find the messages easily on backup tapes stored at remote locations — and that the IRS never bothered to look for those tapes, even as it was telling Congress that all possible routes for message recovery had been exhausted.
Yet so many American’s and a large majority of Boulderites have infinite faith in government.
Seagate visitors keep stopping by despite the lack of information posted on this blog. Apparently job security is at the top of their employees minds. I suspect this is a common theme at many hi-tech companies but this blog only provides STX datapoints.
Good luck Seagate employees. Feel free to leave a comment or two.
GOP Is Driving Its Base Into Trump’s Arms | The Daily Caller
What’s the point in voting Republican if the party is going to do nothing it promised when it attains power?
Good thing they call it “climate change” – Arctic expedition to study global warming put on hold because of too much ice [photos] | Twitchy
“Worst” conditions in “20 years.”
What Happened to All the Laughter? – Altucher Confidential
Doctors even call laughing, “inner jogging” because it does all sorts of good things for our health, our brain, releases endorphins, and makes us happier, etc etc.
Boulder Energy Future propaganda website: Energy Future
In the technology world they have a saying, “Good, Fast, Cheap, you can only pick two.”
But when it comes to municipalization in the People’s Republic of Boulder, there are no tradeoffs. From their propaganda mailing piece that arrived over the weekend, here is what municiplation brings:
Municipalization is the term used for creating a local utility and moving away from a for-profit, investor-owned electric utility (in our case, Xcel Energy). For Boulder, it’s an opportunity to create our own electric utility—one that runs on cleaner energy, is cheaper, supports innovation, and serves the public.
No tradeoffs at all. Municipalization is truly the promised land. Cleaner energy, cheaper, supports innovation and serves the public. Only in Boulder can you have your cake and eat it too.
Citizens of Boulder, a simple question: “Are your really so effing stoopid that you believe this bullshit?” Yea, I thought so.
Wonder how he polls in Boulder? Bernie Sanders Is The Future Of The Democratic Party
What is wholly true is that big majorities within the Democratic Party support these policies and they would probably go a lot further if they could. Hillary is lucky there isn’t a more compelling and charismatic candidate making a more comprehensive socialistic case to Americans as there was the last time around. The difference between her adopted position and his real one is scope.
That’s not to say Democrats are unadulterated socialists, sitting around and studying communist theorists in their spare time, any more than small-government conservatives are opposed to every state-run program. But today, many prefer policies that would be referred to as socialist anywhere else in the world. And the stigma attached to the word is slowly, and fittingly, disintegrating.
According to a YouGov poll, 52 percent of Americans hold favorable views of capitalism, while only 26 percent have a favorable view of socialism. When broken down further, 43 percent of Democrats hold sympathetic views towards socialism. Democrats are as just likely to have a favorable view of capitalism as they do collectivism. The future does not bode well for free-market fans. According to a Pew poll, 49 percent of those between ages 18 and 29 say they have a positive view of socialism—with only 43 percent having a negative view. Considering the history and connotation of the word, that’s quite extraordinary.
So the awkwardness surrounding Sanders’ candidacy—one that is supposed to make Hillary seem more reasonable—is that he is running with almost indistinguishable philosophical positions from the front-runner.
In addition to Politico, others have tried to dismiss the growing comfort many Americans feel about far leftist economic ideas. A Gallup poll circulating this week allegedly found that nine in 10 Americans say they would vote for a qualified presidential candidate who was either Catholic, or black, or Hispanic or Jewish, etc., but less than half of Americans would vote for a candidate who was a socialist. But this sort of poll tells us absolutely nothing. What goes unsaid is that almost half of Americans would vote for a socialist. And every other designation in the poll has nothing to do with politics or ideology. Being Catholic is not comparable to being a socialist, Gallup. Not even when Francis is pope.
The notion that we have inherent rights—without even mentioning economic freedom—are laughed at by Left as if it were some sort of antiquated or alien concoction.Now, of course, Sanders will not win the Democratic Party nomination. I’m skeptical he’s even as popular as polls claim. Still, he’s moved to the ideological center of the Democratic Party without changing at all. So will his ideas. Democrats will not pull back once they get their $10 minimum wage. They will not be content once universal pre-K is passed. They will not be satiated after the next round of unilateral Environmental Protection Agency intrusions into the energy markets are instituted. And liberals will not never concede that health care is now working so we won’t need any more government involvement.
Liberals may not believe in controlling the means of production, but many do believe in tightening controls enough through regulatory regimes and laws that they can dictate the outcome in markets they do care about. When the downturn hit us, Americans witnessed an unprecedented array of interventions, producing the weakest recovery in history. When oil prices spiked, and the populist rage against energy companies was reaching a crescendo, a Rasmussen poll found that a plurality of Democrats (37 percent) supported outright nationalization of the oil companies. When the health-care debate was at its most overwrought, a New York Times/CBS News poll found a majority supporting a government-run insurance company.
Today, almost every major liberal interst group supports some sort of enhanced collectivism. The notion that we have inherent rights—without even mentioning economic freedom—are laughed at by Left as if it were some sort of antiquated or alien concoction. Even positions that could be argued on grounds of individual freedom, like gay marriage, are now deteriorating into acts of coercion.
Over at Commentary, Noah Rothman points out the double standard in the media’s coverage of Todd Akin and Bernie Sanders. He’s right. The contradictory coverage is, no doubt, in part due to some in the media finding Sanders’ economic philosophy far more palatable than Akin’s offensive pseudoscientific mumbo jumbo. But it has to be said that Akin’s comments were much farther out of the mainstream on the Right than Sanders’ positions are on the Left. And the efforts to remedy the supposed moral imperfections of capitalism through force has led to more pain and suffering than anything Akin could ever say. Sanders might be treated as an outlier. But really, it’s more likely he’s the future.
Energy Future Home – What could possibly go wrong?
For Boulder, it’s an opportunity to create our own electric utility—one that runs on cleaner energy, is cheaper, supports innovation, and serves the public.
It will NOT be cheaper without substantial subsidies from Uncle Sam.
No charges. No citation. No due process. Just perfectly legal theft.
But first the TSA had to post pictures. Twitchy reaction.
Amazon.com: Ignored Heroes of World War II: The Manhattan Project workers of Oak Ridge, Tennessee eBook: Richard Cook: Kindle Store
It’s one of the great untold epic stories of American history.
The Manhattan Project, with two atomic bombs, ended World War II in only eight days. Americans have no concept of the speed or the audacious scale of this endeavor to make enriched fuel for a weapon.
Over 75,000 Americans worked 24/7 in Oak Ridge, Tennessee for almost three years, in the largest secret scientific/industrial complex ever built in human history. When finished, the uranium needed was the size of volleyball. Over 75,000 workers work 24//7 for almost three years…for a volleyball.
What drove this Herculean effort? Two things: Adolf Hitler and the slaughter of war. Hitler had an atomic bomb program too. If he got the bomb first, London would be gone. This was a race, with millions of lives hanging in the balance.
The breakneck pace of the project also happened because of American soldiers dying in distant lands. The loss of American life during World War II would equal a 9/11 attack every five days for three and a half years. There wasn’t a moment to waste.
Ignored Heroes of World War II, is an oral history with quotes from these workers who were eye-witnesses to the most important event of the 20th century. Over 100 photographs from Oak Ridge compliment the oral histories. Never before has there been a narrative told from the perspective of the workers who came to this top secret industrial plant to help end the deadliest conflict ever seen by mankind.
Modest by nature, optimistic by the demands of war, these workers, mostly young, mostly women and mostly single, weave their tales of work, love, marriage and the stresses of war and isolation. It is unlike any narrative from our nation’s history.
The story line is a hybrid of science fiction fantasia, patriotic inspired drama and romantic intrigue.
Their determination, their humor and their pluck can inspire and humble us today. When called upon, Americans are capable of great sacrifice, resilience and devotion; which all flows from a love of country and, ultimately, from a love of family.
These ignored heroes did everything asked of them to get their boys back home safely. It is time for these heroes to tell their stories. We can ignore them no longer.
Looks like a great Father’s Day gift.
Europe has yet to produce a single Internet company valued at more than $10 billion compared with six privately owned startups worth more than $10 billion in the U.S. Perhaps the OECD’s time would be better spent studying the creation of wealth in this new landscape instead of its redistribution in times past.
The Mythical Link Between Income Inequality and Slow Growth – WSJ
Yet so many “Americans” want the US to become more Europeanized.
FLASHBACK: ABC’s ’08 Prediction: NYC Under Water from Climate Change By June 2015
New York City underwater? Gas over $9 a gallon? A carton of milk costs almost $13? Welcome to June 12, 2015. At least those were the wildly-inaccurate predictions made by ABC News exactly seven years ago. Appearing on Good Morning America in 2008, Bob Woodruff hyped Earth 2100, a special that pushed apocalyptic predictions of the then-futuristic 2015.
Conclusion:
Seven years later, the network has quietly ignored its horribly inaccurate predictions about 2015. When it comes to global warming claims, apparently results don’t matter for ABC.
Dumber than a box of rocks.
A recent poll released by the Republican National Committee, shows that Hillary Clinton is “clearly unpopular” among battleground state Independents, including those in Colorado.
She trails the generic Republican candidate 40%-36% in key states that include: Virginia, North Carolina, Florida, Pennsylvania, Iowa, Wisconsin, Ohio, Arizona, Colorado and Nevada. What is most intriguing, however, is that Clinton does not enjoy a significant advantage with independent women in those 10 swing states. Her favorable to unfavorable ratio with Independent women is barely a net favorable (49:43), and she only leads the generic Republican by 3-points among them. That is certainly a small enough gap for the eventual GOP nominee to close in the next 18 months.
Boulderites, get out there and propagandize for Hillary