In meantime, there are waves to catch.

Why I Support My Son’s Decision To Put College On Hold … To Surf – Forbes.

As a mom of a surfer, I have come to learn—and accept—that there’s a certain surf culture, which says that when there are waves, you gotta surf them. It’s not like running, for example, which you can pretty much do whenever you want, because the road is always there. With surfing, you’re at the mercy of Mother Nature’s decisions to give you good waves (or not). And yes, sometimes that means missing first period.

Again, I realize I’m risking judgment from other parents here. But Bradley has always been a good and responsible student who is more than trustworthy to make up any missed work. Besides, he is more inspired about life when he’s out there surfing, instead of being stuck in a classroom some days.

To inspiration. Long may you run Bradley.

Posted in Education, the weekend | Leave a comment

Boulder bag tax and self checkout lanes

I predict it won’t be long until bags are removed from the self checkout lanes at grocery stores. Gotta enforce that tax, can’t let potential revenue go missing.

Posted in Boulder is stoopid, the weekend | Tagged | Leave a comment

Congress – what’s NOT to like about this?

Congress Is on Pace to Do Less Than Record-Breaking Low – Bloomberg.

added: Corrected title to include “NOT”!

Posted in politics, the weekend | Leave a comment

CNBC considering rapid-fire stocks talk show – NYPOST.com

CNBC considering rapid-fire stocks talk show – NYPOST.com.

One simple suggestion, stop making it the 24 hour Jim Cramer arrogant loudmouth network.

Posted in business, the weekend | Leave a comment

Who are the real thugs?

Hinkle: Commit any felonies lately?

Elizabeth Daly went to jail over a case of bottled water.

According to the Charlottesville Daily Progress, shortly after 10 p.m. April 11, the University of Virginia student bought ice cream, cookie dough and a carton of LaCroix sparkling water from the Harris Teeter grocery store at the popular Barracks Road Shopping Center. In the parking lot, a half-dozen men and a woman approached her car, flashing some kind of badges. One jumped on the hood. Another drew a gun. Others started trying to break the windows.

Daly understandably panicked. With her roommate in the passenger seat yelling “Go, go, go!” Daly drove off, hoping to reach the nearest police station. The women dialed 911. Then a vehicle with lights and sirens pulled them over, and the situation clarified: The people who had swarmed Daly’s vehicle were plainclothes agents of the Virginia Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control. The agents had thought the sparkling water was a 12-pack of beer.

Did the ABC’s enforcers apologize? Not in the slightest. They charged Daly with three felonies: two for assaulting an officer (her vehicle had grazed two agents; neither was hurt) and one for eluding the police. Last week, the commonwealth’s attorney dropped the charges.

The agents’ excessive display of force is outrageously disproportionate to the offense they mistakenly thought they witnessed: an underage purchase of alcohol. But in a sense, Daly got off easy. A couple of weeks after her ordeal, a 61-year-old man in Tennessee was killed when the police executed a drug raid on the wrong house. A few weeks later, in another wrong-house raid, police officers killed a dog belonging to an Army veteran. These are not isolated incidents; for more information, visit the interactive map at www.cato.org/raidmap.

Unfortunately, there’s a bigger issue involved…

They are, however, part and parcel of two broader phenomena. One is the militarization of domestic law enforcement. In recent years, police departments have widely adopted military tactics, military equipment (armored personnel carriers, flash-bang grenades) — and, sometimes, the mindset of military conquerors rather than domestic peacekeepers.

The other phenomenon is the increasing degree to which civilians are subject to criminal prosecution for noncriminal acts, including exercising the constitutionally protected right to free speech.

It seems the supposed “good guys” are the thugs. Read the whole thing.

A whole lot of downsizing can go on anytime now. We’ve had two issues with the same house where the SWAT team was called in. Our neighborhood is a single road so these events prevented 75% of residents from either entering or leaving. In retrospect, the response was out of porportion to the threat. Craziness.

Posted in freedom | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Obama snooping for what purpose?

Obama CFPB Credit Watchdog Snoops, Shares Personal Financial Data – Investors.com.

Big Brother is watching you — in even more ways than previously known. It turns out the National Security Agency and Internal Revenue Service aren’t the only federal agencies gathering sensitive information about you.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, created by the Dodd-Frank financial reform, is collecting reams of data on your bill-paying and spending habits.

In fact, the Obama administration is compiling a massive database of personal information, including monthly credit card, mortgage, car and other payments.

The data will be warehoused by private contractors and shared with other federal agencies and Congress, as well as researchers in the field.

Democrats on the House banking panel have already requested auto lending industry data that the CFPB is collecting as part of anti-discrimination probes.

I’m sorry, whatever this information ends up getting used for, even if it’s discrimination, it’s not worth the cost. There are other ways to address these issues without invading the financial lives of every in the United States with a bank account or credit card.

 

Posted in freedom, privacy | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Obama Must ‘Come to Congress’

Rep. Steve King: Obama Must ‘Come to Congress’ to Make ObamaCare Changes.

“President Obama has no constitutional authority to amend his own bill,” King asserted. “He has no constitutional authority to simply waive the law. No matter Obama’s determination to suspend his own law, only Congress can do so.”

Not holding my breath.

Posted in healthcare reform | Tagged | Leave a comment

Not in Boulder

Pew: Obama less ‘honest,’ more ‘incompetent’ than Bush | WashingtonExaminer.com.

Posted in Boulder | Leave a comment

Obamacare fail

‘Best tweet ever!’ Gov. Jindal scores with epic Obamacare boom

Posted in Boulder | Leave a comment

Nine out of 10 victims were males abused by female staff

Instapundit remarks: Expect minimal outrage from the usually-outraged.

Drawing on their sample, Justice Department researchers estimate that 1,390 juveniles in the facilities they examined have experienced sex abuse at the hands of the staff supervising them, a rate of nearly 8 percent. Twenty percent who said they were victimized by staff said it happened on more than 10 occasions. Nine out of 10 victims were males abused by female staff.

Nothing to see here, move along.

Posted in Boulder | Tagged | Leave a comment

Why The Status Quo Is Doomed

Guest Post: Why The Status Quo Is Doomed | Zero Hedge.

The wheels have come off the endless growth via expanding debt machine. Rising interest rates are the final blow to this agenda, and the political and financial classes have no Plan B. They are floundering, clueless, bereft of historical context, creativity and courage. Their failure of imagination is total, complete and catastrophic:

Damn, I’m depressed. I’m heading off to bed. Oh, read the whole thing, it’s bad even before the unfunded liabilities of Medicare and Social Security ($87 trillion).

Posted in fnance | Leave a comment

Where are the Boys?

Does it matter? Where are the Boys?.

Certainly, as I sat at that graduation ceremony, I was very aware that, had the situation been reversed and every role in the ceremony been given to a male, there would have been a hue and cry from every direction. Well, actually, there is no way that would have been allowed to happen; someone would have stepped in to “balance” out the gender representation. Instead, a well-informed source reported that the school administration told the faculty that the male student body president had “received enough recognition during high school” therefore he shouldn’t be given any senior honors or recognition in the graduation ceremony. Ironically, there didn’t seem to be a problem that one of the senior girls was recognized 5 times in the printed program and also gave the major address.

There will be a price to pay.

Clearly the culture against boys and men is getting worse; there are more and more instances, like the graduation ceremony that I attended, where the discrimination against boys is blatant. Those of us who grew up with wonderful fathers, married great guys and have terrific sons and grandsons recognize the importance of allowing boys to be boys. After all, those boys eventually become men. Moreover, we fully understand that those women who gain at the expense of boys and men will, in the long run, ultimately lose. Society as a whole loses, too, when the culture becomes a bitter feuding ground between the sexes and an increasingly inhospitable environment for friendship and collegiality — and, inevitably, marriage and family formation.

Nothing to see here? Think again.

Posted in Boulder | Leave a comment

Be prepared: Boulder’s bag fee goes into effect Monday

Whatever: Boulder’s bag fee goes into effect Monday – Boulder – Daily Camera.

Posted in Boulder | Leave a comment

Don’t see this happening in Boulder

Australian PM Who Supported Biggest Carbon Tax in History Gets the Boot.

Is there any energy price or energy tax that would be too high for Boulder politicians? How about the citizens?

It certainly doesn’t hurt that the State of Colorado and the President are providing cover. Do they realize the cover won’t always be there?

Posted in energy | Tagged | Leave a comment

Egypt/Cairo protests: 17 million or “tens of thousands”?

The PJ Tatler » Live blogging anti-Morsi Tamarod protests in Egypt.

NBC news has been reporting “tens of thousands”, that’s all you need to know.

1:50p So after a few hours the protests have swelled into the millions up and down Egypt with only isolated incidents of conflict. From all media reports, there are millions in the streets. Even the Muslim Brotherhood’s top international jurist, Yusuf al-Qaradawi, appears to be hedging his bets.

BBC:”The number of people protesting today is the largest number in a political event in the history of mankind. Keep impressing .. Egypt. “

h/t to Instapundit and Michael Brown’s fb page.

Posted in freedom | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Germans Loved Obama. Now We Don’t Trust Him. – NYTimes.com

sMalte Spitz: Germans Loved Obama. Now We Don’t Trust Him. – NYTimes.com.

In Germany, whenever the government begins to infringe on individual freedom, society stands up. Given our history, we Germans are not willing to trade in our liberty for potentially better security. Germans have experienced firsthand what happens when the government knows too much about someone. In the past 80 years, Germans have felt the betrayal of neighbors who informed for the Gestapo and the fear that best friends might be potential informants for the Stasi. Homes were tapped. Millions were monitored.

Although these two dictatorships, Nazi and Communist, are gone and we now live in a unified and stable democracy, we have not forgotten what happens when secret police or intelligence agencies disregard privacy. It is an integral part of our history and gives young and old alike a critical perspective on state surveillance systems.

Nothing from this story makes me optimistic that American’s will react like the Germans are to the NSA/PRISM snooping.

Malte Spitz is a member of the German Green Party’s executive committee and a candidate for the Bundestag in the September national election.

Posted in big government, privacy | Tagged , | Leave a comment

IRS agents invovled in targeting will feel “at home” at Facebook

Where retired IRS agents go to work: Facebook Blocks Fox’s Todd Starnes over ‘Politically Incorrect’ Gun Post.

Posted in big government, freedom | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Finally, half laughing, half pissed, he growled, ‘Just write the fucking story.’

…and so he did. Longreads – ‘My Body Stopped Speaking to Me’: The First-Person Account of a Near-Death Experience.

Having a daughter with an autoimmune disease who was on steriods for an extended period of time, I identify with some parts of this story. Although she was pretty damn sick, she was no where near as sick as the author.

Posted in health, the weekend | Leave a comment

“…this is a victory of common sense”

Charges Dismissed Against 8th-Grader Who Wore NRA T-Shirt.

Posted in 2nd amendment | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Failure Deniers: Climate Change and Public-Sector Science

PJ Media » Failure Deniers: Climate Change and Public-Sector Science.

Tuesday afternoon, as I was reading Barack Obama’s Georgetown University speech on “climate change,” it occurred to me that the biggest and perhaps most consequential difference between the government and the private sector is how each reacts when reality doesn’t behave as expected.

The public sector does not have a monopoly on people who become irrationally wedded to ideas and programs which have become outmoded, obsolete, redundant, or worthless. The difference is what happens to such people — and in some cases, their firms — in the private sector when they stubbornly stick to their guns.

At a private firm, if a new product or idea loses — or is on track to lose — serious amounts of money, or if a research project is going nowhere, it gets killed (see: the Ford Edsel, New Coke, Apple Newton). Those who fall in love with these flame-outs and blindly defend them even when the handwriting is on the wall get fired. If a bad product or idea isn’t terminated quickly enough, it has the potential to jeopardize entire companies, even large ones (see JCPenney’s three-tier pricing plan and HP’s 2011 Touchpad debacle).

But within government?

Hah… read the whole thing!

Posted in big government, climate change | Leave a comment