2008.12.09 it's what i hate about you:

Powered by Gregarious (42)

Things that have been irking me, lately (aside from Mr. "Take Down Your Domain")…

CNN's Campbell Brown. I don't know why she gets on my nerves so bad. Her "outrage" just comes across as hokey and insincere. She's CNN's mad dash to try to court the rabid fanbase of Keith Olbermann, and it shows.

I've also sickened of the suffix of "gate" to any scandal. Just this morning I've read multiple articles about "Zunegate;" there's a rumor going around that Obama uses a Zune, rather than an iPod. GASP!

And, further along that thread, the adding of "punk" to denote some sort of (usually literary) movement. Sure, we had Cyberpunk, then Steampunk, but now they're trying for Atompunk. That's just getting stupid. What's next? A gay porn literary movement called "Dickpunk?" Cat fiction called "Catpunk"?

Of course, this just helps to create a Punkgate. And I've now become part of the problem.

Popularity: unranked [?]

- 10:27 am:: im
share this :: permalink ::
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
:: no comments
categories ::  Uncategorized

2008.12.05 5,6, suck my dick:

Powered by Gregarious (42)

Dear Jackass That Decided to Harrass Our Hosting Company to Bring Our Site Down,

Fuck you. Eat a bag of dicks.

Sincerely,
x:13 design

Popularity: unranked [?]

- 03:24 pm:: im
share this :: permalink ::
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
:: no comments
categories ::  Uncategorized

2008.12.02 it was a good day:

Powered by Gregarious (42)

This morning when I went out to my car, my driver's side door was frozen shut. This, of course, agitated me. I grumbled, of course. What a shitty way to start my day, right? So I climbed in the passenger side and I was on my way. I forgot to get out to Kroger, last night, so I had to stop into McD's for a sausage biscuit. I hit the drive through. The girl starts talking…and my window won't roll down! Frozen! FUCK!

I try the door…STILL FROZEN! DOUBLE FUCK!

So I pull around and park the car, bitching up a storm to myself. When I get to the door, the one on that side of the building…LOCKED!

MOTHERFUCKERS! What the fuck is up with this shitty day?!

So I walk around. I get inside, the transaction takes 30 seconds, tops. I have a little laugh with the girl about my morning, and I was out the door.

When I went outside, I saw ol' Bob S. across the street. I had seen him waiting for the TARC there a few times, but never thought to stop. I asked him where he was headed, and it was on my way to work, so I gave him a ride.

I hadn't seen Bob in a while, so it was nice to catch up. He's not really drinking, anymore. He's got a good job. He's living with his girlfriend. He's got a good new band going. He's in a good place. I dropped him off at work and told him he's always got a ride in to work, if he wants it, as it's on my way. No sense in standing in the cold, waiting on a TARC.

I turned it over in my head, on the rest of the way into work. It was nice to see Bob. To reconnect. And then I realized, had my car door not been frozen shut, I wouldn't have had to get out of the car. Had the door not been locked at McDonald's, I wouldn't have walked around. Had I not walked around, I wouldn't have seen Bob and had that chance to reconnect.

This isn't one of those "all things happen for a reason" type of things. I mean…it's fairly simple: Had those things all not happened, I would not have seen Bob. There's a stark zen-ness to it.

And, of course, through the magic of thermodynamics (and/or karma, if you so choose), my car door opened fine, once I got to work.

Good things happened, though I thought they wouldn't.

Popularity: unranked [?]

- 05:12 pm:: im
share this :: permalink ::
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
:: no comments
categories ::  Uncategorized

2008.11.06 if i don't win, i'm-a gonna break even:

Powered by Gregarious (42)

I probably should have been like everyone else and posted my big political post yesterday, but I just had to take a day off and reflect. That and I'm intensely lazy.

Yeah. So. Wow. How about that? The American people stepped up, said they had had enough of this Bush/NeoCon bullshit, and elected a man who has spent the past two years inspiring voters from all walks of life, all across this country. I'll be honest…I didn't always have faith that it was going to turn out this way. More often than I would care to admit, I lay awake in the dark, thinking about stolent elections, extended wars, and complete economic collapse. I actually (in my head) started preparing for a possible Mad Max style future where I was going to have to convert a motocross bike to run on vegetable oil and live out in the woods, eating squirrel.

So, obviously, I was pretty overjoyed, tuesday night. True, the good people of the great Commonwealth of Kentucky did not oust Mitch McConnell, but I figure it's still a win.

I still don't have much to say about it. I'm probably still in shock. I've come to accept that it happened. That it's reality. I just can't quite put all of my thoughts in order to say much more about it.

Popularity: unranked [?]

- 09:54 am:: im
share this :: permalink ::
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
:: no comments
categories ::  Uncategorized

2008.10.02 use it like a screwball would:

Powered by Gregarious (42)

What a week, huh? The House fails to pass the bailout bill, the markets crash, and there was a period on tuesday where I wish I had $10,000 for about 15 minutes (Google's stock crashed right at close, then rebounded almost immediately in after-hours trading).

And most people are putting the blame for the bill failing the House squarely on John "Maverick" McCain. They had a provisional agreement until he touched down, then the shit hit the fan. Then again, they're also trying to blame Next Gingrich, so what does anybody know? I know that I'm really glad I never started a 401k, that's for sure.

Speaking of Google, I have started to covet the T-Mobile G1 (not in that ugly white, though). I thought, a few times, about switching to AT&T for the iPhone, but it looks like I've been rewarded for my patience. And my upgrade should make it more than affordable. Good thing, too…my RAZR is showing its age. Either way, it should make Matt's Treo look like it has some sort of childhood developmental disorder.

Popularity: unranked [?]

- 08:49 am:: im
share this :: permalink ::
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
:: 2 comments
categories ::  Gadgets - Politics - Rants - Raves - Technology

2008.09.26 a long time ago there were pirates:

Powered by Gregarious (42)

You know…I almost forgot the form I used to use on these things. Gone is my staunchly anti-upper-case stance. I think that went out the window, once I started writing record reviews (first for 75 or Less, now for local alt-weekly LEO). Who knows?

So what has happened in the past year-and-a-half or so, since I've last posted? Well…I got my shit together, I guess you would say. I met a wonderful girl. I pounded the pavement, and I came up with a pretty decent job. I'm actually pushing the boundaries of becoming financially solvent. That's a scary one.

As far as my last post is concerned, rest assured that I finished off everything on that list. It WAS a good day.

I guess my absence from these hallowed halls could boil down to the mundanity of life. I bore myself typing this shit out and trying to make it interesting. And I'm easily amused. I can only imagine that reading my posts ranks somewhere far below watching paint dry, on the entertainment scale.

I'm really bothered by all the little suggested Wikipedia links below this window, as I type this. Can we turn that shit off? What the fuck? I really don't think I'll find it necessary to post a link to the Wikipedia entry for "watching paint dry." Especially since it just links to the entry for paint, anyway.

Meh. I told Matt I was going to weigh in with my thoughts on ol' John "ex-maverick" McCain today, but I'm going to see how today's economic crisis talks pan out. I'm thinking he's got just about enough rope, at this point…

Popularity: unranked [?]

- 01:06 pm:: im
share this :: permalink ::
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
:: no comments
categories ::  Uncategorized

2007.03.22 it was a good day:

Powered by Gregarious (42)

(10th anniversary of heaven's gate)

Popularity: 25% [?]

- 03:04 pm:: im
share this :: permalink ::
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
:: no comments
categories ::  Uncategorized

2006.12.27 wish i never got old:

Powered by Gregarious (42)

Ahhh…the year-end wrap-up. Where to start? To be honest, most of the shit that happened to me I didn't post about. Why have I been maintaining radio silence? Who knows?

I finally joined the rest of the web-using world and started utilizing digg. I even dugg a post I posted here. Oh…I'm such a whore.

Today I'm bemoaning the fact that we're not a more regularly updated, noticed "blog." I mean…they could have sent us a couple of these, for fucksake.

I've spent an inordinate amount of time listening to Neil Young, lately. Mostly Crazy Horse material. It's speaking to the parts of the brain Brooksie and I have started activating for the new band. Speaking of the new band, it's tentatively titled "Birth Machine." We expect to rattle the foundation of a local venue this spring.

I guess the biggest news of the season is that i had to have Clyde put to sleep (the Thursday before Christmas; it made the holiday even more fun). Some of you long-time readers (if there's any left) will remember Clyde as my beloved cat of the past decade. She had a tumor on her chest that spread to her lungs. Toward the end she was having trouble breathing and would only eat fresh turkey and "catmilk" (speaking of which, I have two things of that stuff left, if anyone needs/wants it), which made us think it was all just some elaborate scam on her part. Regardless, we couldn't take it anymore and took her back to the vet. He gave us the dire news and we all endured a bit of pre-holiday heartbreak.
Needless to say, she's incredibly missed.

Clyde - 1996-2006

Popularity: 33% [?]

2006.12.14 swallow that until you're full:

Powered by Gregarious (42)

So I caught a commercial for pillsbury grands earlier, and they showed them making little pizzas on the biscuits. I took the time to look around the internet for recipes, but none of them sounded like they were exactly what I thought I saw.

So I was forced to go to Kroger and get some supplies and see if I could make my own version. Here's what I came up with:

Old Man Hall's Pizza Grands

1 can Pillsbury Grands biscuits (Flaky, any flavor,)
1 jar Kroger Pizza Zip (I went with Traditional)
1 bag pizza cheese
x amount, whatever other toppings you want

Preheat the oven to 350°.

Split the individual biscuits in half (thinner, flakier crust) and place them on an ungreased cookie sheet (I'd like to try making these on one of those pizza stones) about an inch apart. Then spread one spoonful of sauce on top of each one (I went all the way to the edge). Cheese 'em up to your liking, add any other toppings, then bake for 12-14 minutes. You definitely want to check them after about 10-12 minutes, because the bottoms can burn fast, if you're not careful.

Needless to say, these motherfuckers are delicious. I may want to opt for the half-size package of biscuits, next time. Something tells me I'm never gonna eat 16 of these little bastards, delicious as they are.

Popularity: 29% [?]

- 09:41 pm:: im
share this :: permalink ::
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
:: 3 comments
categories ::  Uncategorized

2006.08.28 fritter and waste the hours in an offhand way:

Powered by Gregarious (42)

while i sit here at work, waiting on a simple answer to a possibly not-so-simple questions from someone higher up the ladder, i figure i'll write up a post for ol' bipolar.

this weekend was chock full of shows. too many shows, as fate would have it. i saw shellac and uzeda friday night. the sound was glorious, the venue was unbearably hot. it all ended up being worth it, though. shellac really kicked out the jams. i noticed that it doesn't really matter what albini does on the guitar, as the rhythm section just locks in and keeps burning along. i think i'd kill for a bass player of bob weston's caliber.
friday night ended up with all kinds of drunken chicanery that i can't be bothered to try and remember clearly.

saturday was another hot one in st. john's for shipping news and wolverine brass. for some reason, that night the sound was fucking terrible. you take the good with the bad, i guess. after that show, i headed over to za's to see arch and buffalo bill. buffalo bill covered motley crue's "wild side." i was most pleased. after that…more drunkeness.

sunday my allergies put the hurt on me. probably the multiple days of drowning myself in second hand smoke. who knows? either way, i ended up having to skip the young widows show. i took some allergy medicine and actually passed out during the car chase scene in ronin. i really didn't know that was humanly possible.

but sunday night, i got my sea legs back under me and was able to hit up the crack of doom reunion show, which was a total blast. i think it even caused more permanent hearing damage to my right ear. always a sign of a great show.

well…i got that simple answer i was waiting on.

Popularity: 29% [?]

- 03:00 pm:: im
share this :: permalink ::
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
:: no comments
categories ::  Music - Nothing


Archives:


 
bipolar RSS/ATOM feed
Powered by WordPress raloqid

2004.02.10 eventually this election year will end:

Powered by Gregarious (42)

m@'s coworker says: i may need to eat in until pay day
m@ says: right on.
m@'s coworker says: budget
m@'s coworker says: not bush budget
m@ says: hehehehehehe
m@ says: "we are going to spend 10 dollars on lunch."
m@ says: "no, wait, i meant 20."
m@ says: "er… 25?"
m@'s coworker says: we could feed the world on what we are wasting in iraq
m@ says: true dat.
m@ says: and then some.
m@ says: we could feed, clothe, and house the world.
m@'s coworker says: naa they would hate us if we did that
m@ says: i've been reading that book "The Price of Loyalty" about former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill, who's spoken out against Pres. Bush.
m@ says: the bit i read last night was talking about how he figured we could go in and, for only $25 million, we could get clean water to every person in Ghana
m@ says: while the contractors said it would take $2 billion
m@'s coworker says: kick backs are hell
m@ says: no shit.
m@ says: y'know, there's nothing wrong with making a little profit, even if you're doing "charity" work. but, it's gotta be within reason.
m@ says: everyone has to survive, so profit has to be made, but some of these people are just crazy.
m@'s coworker says: mr. vice president
m@ says: hehe. no shit.
m@ says: that's the other thing that book lays out… pretty much just over 1 week after the Pres. took office, Cheney, Rove, Lindsey, and other Pres. advisors were trying to figure out how to take out Saddam.
m@ says: 1 week!
m@ says: and we wonder why they lied about the intelligence!
m@ says: what i wonder is why there's even any discussion about it, why aren't we just watching an impeachment trial and war tribunal right now?
m@'s coworker says: the republican are good at this
m@'s coworker says: or americans are too stupid to see it
m@ says: i think it's a little of both.
m@ says: there has been a rise in the social moral conservativism of the general public, and i think the Pres. appeals to those people. more & more i find people who call out a single issue and use that for their entire basis of support for the Pres.
m@ says: without regard to the other things he's doing.
m@ says: so, is *he* pulling the wool over the public's eyes? no, i don't think so. i think the liberals, the people who already question him can see plainly enough what he's doing… i think the conservatives are pulling the wool over their own eyes.
m@ says: they're pulling the pro-life blanket, or the anti-gay-marriage blanket, or the general christian-morality blanket over their heads.
m@ says: and they've got clothes-pins on their noses so they can't smell their own farts.
m@'s coworker says: yep these pro-life commerical are abound
m@ says: yup. and y'know, really the majority of the country is pro-life, or at least pro-cautious-choice.
m@'s coworker says:
and anti-welfare
m@ says: but the thing is, the government and laws supposedly exist to protect the rights of the minority against the will of the majority.
m@ says: i don't know that they're so much anti-welfare as anti-"handouts".
m@ says: conservatives typically say welfare's ok, but that people take advantage of it, and that's what gets their goat.
m@ says: they don't want someone else living off their hard work, if that someone else is making no attempt to do hard work of their own.
m@'s coworker says: well we can only hope the democrats will win this one
m@ says: yeah. hopefully.
m@ says: i think it's likely.

also, the subjects of this article seriously disturb me.

Popularity: 4% [?]

Follow this post via RSS 2.0

10 Responses to “eventually this election year will end:”

brian. said:

I'm a liberal and I'm personally sick and tired of people on welfare not out trying to get a goddamn job. If I have to work a fucking job I hate everyday, then they should have to, as well.

Same goes with illegal immigrants. Become a citizen and contribute to this nation or drain the resources of where you came from. I don't think this is a racist point of view. I have no problem with immigrants who are in this country legally. It's the ones that are here ILLEGALLY that suck up public money like welfare and the like. Money that they've never paid taxes to fund, themselves.

# February 10, 2004,

Javan said:

Brian, amen! I agree with both of those points wholeheartedly. Couldn't have said it better myself. :)
However, we shouldn't consider removing Bush from office for skewed intelligence- it seems to be perfectly OK with us if our presidents lie these days anyway. Clinton lied out his arse all the time and he didn't get removed.

# February 10, 2004,

m@ said:

Brian, i agree that the welfare system is in dire need of an overhaul. We don't need to get rid of it, and, while we need to make sure (more now than ever i'd say) that the people who truly *need* it *get* it, we also need to make sure that the people who *can* work, *do* work, and that they don't stay on welfare. As for the illegal immigrant thing, yeah, we need to make sure that people here illegally aren't receiving public money, and that they're either sent home, or assisted towards citizenship.

As for the tax thing, i'd say that 80% of the people on welfare have never paid income taxes anyway, as they're most likely all low income earners from low income families. Does that mean they shouldn't get welfare, no? What it means is that they, more than any group, need more help to get on their feet and on their way to becoming *productive* citizens.

How exactly to reform the system with these goals is a subject best discussed elsewhere.

and Javan, i never actually suggested Bush be removed from office. I said he should be impeached, just as Clinton was, for lying (actually Clinton was impeached for perjury, but that's just a more official form of lying). If we removed Bush, then Cheney would be President, and God knows that'd probably be even worse than what we've got now. my "war tribunal" statement was probably going a little far, but it's probably not totally unwarranted.

# February 11, 2004,

paul said:

a lot less people died for clinton's lies.

# February 11, 2004,

Javan said:

All I can say is that a lie is still a lie.

And, Matt, I noticed that you did only say impeach- I meant, too, that Bush shouldn't be removed from office (it's own point) but I see the impeachment process pretty pointless if it doesn't end in any result. The two times it has been implemented on a President, it has been pointless.

# February 11, 2004,

m@ said:

sure a lie is still a lie, but there's a difference between a lie that costs $15.00 for dry-cleaning a blue dress, and a lie that costs thousands of human lives. you can't tell me that the lie that kills isn't worse than the lie that doesn't.

and the impeachment process *is* a bit pointless if there's no result, but the conservatives sure didn't care when they wasted millions in taxpayer dollars to impeach Clinton.

# February 11, 2004,

Javan said:

Yeah, I think we are both in agreement that *impeaching* is worthless of itself, and that it should not be used where the circumstances do not truly merit it.

Also, I am waiting for the fact to be proven that the intelligence was, in fact, a direct fabricated lie. I do not think it was.

Politicians are corrupt. We know this. However, if for no other reason, and I think that even you, Matt, can agree with this, we can look up to Bush Jr. and the father for the fact that they do what they believe is right, regardless of the electability that it gets them. It certainly doesn't get them much. But I admire the family for doing what they truly believe is right, and I think that we need more politicians to do that, whether they be liberal or conservative.

# February 13, 2004,

m@ said:

well, either way, something needs to be done to restore faith in the checks & balances system. moveon.org is making a big push towards having Congress censure (officially, strongly reprimand) the president because of his misleading the country.

as for the facts, how's this:

Bush presented Iraq as an imminent threat to the U.S., he stated, without reservation, that they had major ongoing WMD projects, that they'd even been attempting to purchase "significant quantities of uranium from Africa".

1. George Tenet said Iraq was never considered an imminent threat, and that any suspected constinuing weapons programs were matters of considerable debate among various analysts at the CIA.
2. David Kay said "we were all wrong" about Iraq's suspected WMD programs
3. There have been no solid links shown between Saddam and Al Quaeda.

Finally, it is a matter of record that, within the first two weeks of his Administration, the President and his handlers were *already* talking about regime change in Iraq. It was one of their first orders of business after the transition. The intelligence was the intelligence, Bush and his administration just saw what they wanted to see, ignored the reservations and warnings of the experts, even ignored that some of their facts were disproved nearly a year before they were presented to the public (the uranium claim). They knew the public wouldn't support an invasion on the "moral" grounds that Saddam was a bad guy who should be gotten rid of, so they exaggerated the facts to make their case–they lied.

Well, unfortunately, there's a difference between what someone *thinks* is right, and what actually is right. And if Bush thinks that everything he's done is right, then he doesn't deserve to be the President of this nation. And i'm not talking about a liberal versus conservative thing here, i'm talking about the fact that we have the largest budget deficit ever, he continues to cut taxes while the deficit grows and the debt mounts ever higher, he creates new programs that give handouts to large corporations (the medicare bill) and free-reign to polluters (the Clear Skies stuff, and the Energy Bill), and he underfunds social programs while imposing new restrictions and requirements upon them.

In essence, he is creating a massive debt for you and your children by handing out our money & their money to large corporations, to the people through massive tax cuts, all while cutting funding to programs (some of which he created!) that help significant segments of our citizenry.

His economic and domestic policies are not conservative, they're irresponsible and damaging to our nation.

# February 14, 2004,

brooksie said:

- "But I admire the family for doing what they truly believe is right, and I think that we need more politicians to do that, whether they be liberal or conservative." -

While there is definately something to be said for standing up for your convictions, I think upholding a personal idea of morality is a far cry from making decisions for an entire country. Not to mention the fact that personal ideals and agendas tend to drive and encourage corruption in our government, and every government throughout history. And if you mean to say "doing what they truly believe is right (for the United States)" , then judging by local and international reactions to recent actions by the US, I am very skeptical of our President's judgement. It is the Presidents job to uphold the will of the people in the best interests of the country. We do not (supposedly) live under tyranny.

Unfortunately, our governement does not represent what I "truly believe is right" for the U.S. and that is why I will be voting the current administration out of office come election time. Because in the end, Ricky Henderson has to do what's best for Ricky Henderson.

# February 17, 2004,

m@ said:

There's nothing wrong with morality itself–with having morals and expressing them. The problems arise when one person attempts to impose his morals on another person. Even murder isn't illegal because of the morality of it, murder is illegal because it infringes on the victim's rights.

As for Bush "doing what he thinks is right"… there is a problem with the manner in which he does it. He's all but flatly stated that he doesn't care about public opinion–he feels that his election (divinely ordained, no less) was a "mandate" from the people to puruse his agenda and ideologies. The problem here is that, it is the responsibility of the representatives of this democracy to represent the will and best interests of the whole people, not simply the majority (oh, wait, he wasn't elected by a majority of the population…) or the large corporate donors. I think Bush has forgotten (or never cared about) his responsibility to all the citizens of the U.S.

He promised in 2000 to have a "humble" foreign, he promised that his Administration would follow Bill Clinton's lead by *not* running a deficit and by paying down the national debt. He promised to be a "compassionate conservative", but his Administration has the worst fiscal record in history next to (i think) Hoover's, he's lost more jobs than every other President in history except (again, i think) Hoover, he's promoted and pushed for an illegitimate war against Iraq, a Medicare bill that doles out billions of dollars to insurance carriers and pharmeceutical companies while providing only the barest of improvements in coverage (where there's any improvement at all) for those who need it the most. His administration is responsible for the Patriot Act which includes some serious strikes against civil liberties. He has consistently pushed to reduce or remove regulations effecting the largest industrial polluters, or those companies who produce products which contribute to pollution (oil industry), which will have serious detrimental impact on our environment.

He has proven to be neither compassionate, nor conservative, and he hasn't stuck to the important promises he made during his election campaign. The unimportant ones he's kept pushing, like his campaign against same-sex marriage, removal of the separation between church & state, privitization of every damn thing imaginable (i.e. giving my money to his biggest contributors), etc. etc.

I don't like him. But even more telling is that even Bill O'Reilly (along with many other Conservative pundits, legislators, and party big-wigs) has become annoyed with him.

Pick up the phone, Ricky. Pick up the phone.

# February 19, 2004,

Archives: