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Sparkie Arbuckle

Thursday, November 16, 2006

Trent Lott - ‘Minority’ Whip?

Monday, November 13, 2006

Dick Cheney, the new Pete Rose

Well we all remember the news about Cheney betting against his own team by investing in foreign markets and funds that benefit from the devaluation of the US dollar? Well I think we can agree its un-sportsman-like and unpatriotic. Its like Pete Rose placing bets as the manager of the Reds. I suggest we kick Cheney out of office and ban him from being in the Vice Presidential hall of fame - ever. He’s rich enough I don’t think he’ll be to bothered by it.

I am also interested to see if Cheney switches his investment strategy now that the Demos are gaining momentum. His companies and their subsidiaries seem to be doing so well with their non-disclosed graft in Iraq that I’m not sure he’ll be bugged with any of it… He’ll just cackle and keep an eye on that Cayman Island account full of foreign currency!

If God Exists…

All the God talk has been really exciting so far so I think the following should be an interesting argument to comment on. I would like to thank Bezu for posting the recent God stuff and also everyone who pipes in on all sides whether I agree with you or not. Its great and I thoroughly enjoy it. Speculating about which politician or news service is lying to us today is fun, but it does get dreary.
I’m not sure where this argument is from - its not mine and I’m pretty sure its old - but I think it provides an interesting thought experiment. It is presented in a formal logical form, with the premises above the line and the conclusions entailed in the premises below the line. To attack a valid (not necc. true) argument one must show that even though the conclusions follow logically from the premises, the premises are flawed. So the task for those who believe in God is to explain which premise is flawed and how.

(1) If God exists, then by definition he is the omnipotent, omniscient, and benevolent creator of the world.
(2) But there is natural evil (suffering not caused by human decision) in the world.
(3) Either God doesn’t know about the natural evil in the world, or he knows about it but cannot prevent it, or he knows about it and could prevent it if he chose to but chooses not to prevent it.
(4) If God does not know about the natural evil in the world, then he is not omniscient.
(5) If God knows about the natural evil in the world, but cannot prevent it, then he is not omnipotent.
(6) If God knows about the natural evil in the world, and could prevent it if he chose to, but chooses not to prevent it, then he is not perfectly benevolent.
------------------------------------------------
(7) Either God is not omniscient, or God is not omnipotent, or God is not perfectly benevolent.
(8) God does not exist.

I understand the argument is a little bizarre, but I’m just hoping it will be a good vehicle for further discussion. If you have any questions about the logical form feel free to ask. The logic should be pretty airtight (That says nothing about the truth value of the premises). Cheers.

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Vermont Elects Socialist Senator, Republican Governor

Vermont also elected a GOP Lt. Governor. While many condemn it as a lefty shithole, Vermont proves it doesn't pay to be schmoozy or negative - talking points are just that and Vermonters vote for integrity and substance in their polticians.

Monday, November 06, 2006

Infant Euthanasia Instead of Abortion?

Original article here.

As medical science progresses the number of seriously disabled babies that survive is growing - we should therefore consider having a debate on allowing active euthanasia, for the good of families, says the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecology. The College explains families who have the most severely disabled babies, babies who until recently would not have survived, are suffering enormously, both emotionally and financially.

The college explains that if obstetricians were allowed to carry out active euthanasia, some patients would be more inclined to wait till birth, rather than carrying out late abortions.

It seems there is some support for this proposal by several parents of severely disabled babies, medical ethicists and geneticists. However, many express concern that this could be the first step in the slippery slope of social engineering.

In a submission to the Nuffield Council on Bioethics, the College explained “We would like the working party to think more radically about non-resuscitation, withdrawal of treatment decisions, the best interests test and active euthanasia as they are ways of widening the management options available to the sickest of newborns.”

Euthanasia of newborns, no matter how sick and/or disabled they are, is illegal in the United Kingdom. In the Netherlands, there are cases where active euthanasia of newborns is allowed, such as when a baby has severe spina bifida.

The college says it is not asking for euthanasia of severely disabled newborns - rather, it would like to see a debate on it.

It is not unheard of for UK doctors to privately admit that mercy killings of newborns do take place.

Predictions for Tomorrow

I voted absentee so the excitement for me is over. I voted about 50% third party, 40% Republican, and 10% Democrat (and only on the town level, for selectmen that I know personally). My state will re-elect a Republican governor by a wide margin, a Dem house member, and a Dem senator. But for many tomorrow is the big day. Everyone has thrown their predictions out there so I figured why shouldn’t I, Sparkie Arbuckle, give my predictions also.
I have a feeling that the house will go Dem (but only by one or two seats). and that the Senate won’t. I think the Dems will even come up 2-3 seats short in the senate. I think we will see wider third party support than we usually do as independent voters support independents. Republican voters, I believe, are not going to vote for Dems or Independents. Any Republicans that have a problem with Bush should be satisfied that almost everybody has campaigned on an anti-Bush platform (except Lieberman). Pro-Bush people have no desire to damage the majorities so they aren’t going to take out anti-Bush campaigning on any of the candidates except the Dems.
I am crossing my fingers that the GOP candidates are rewarded for their efforts to separate themselves from Bush. I would love to see a bona fide effort to reduce federal spending in the next session. If the GOP does succeed and they immediately revert back to mindless Bush administration drones I don’t think that will be something anyone who’s paying attention will easily forgive next time around.
I am optimistic that the GOP can hold on and take some of the things they said during the campaigning seriously. I am not going to be too sad about GOP loses in the house as I feel there was some substantial fiscal irresponsibility and BS moral/social parenting going on that shouldn’t have been. Furthermore I think that seniority should be reinstated in the house to prevent rookie politicians from sitting on important commmitees just because they have proven themselves incapable of original thought and are constantly pandering to party bosses. Seniority is directly related to democracy because the longer a group of citizens supports a candidate the more the candidate should be rewarded with important chairs and commitee memberships.

Nicaragua going Red

Original article here.
MANAGUA: Daniel Ortega, who fought the American-backed contras in a bloody war in the 1980s, held a strong lead over four other Nicaraguan presidential candidates in preliminary results here, officials said early Monday.

With 15 percent of polling stations reporting, Ortega had 40 percent, versus 33 percent for his Harvard-educated rival Eduardo Montealegre of the Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance.

Trailing behind were a Sandinista dissident Edmundo Jarquín; the governing party's candidate, Jose Rizo; and a former contra rebel, Eden Pastora.

If Ortega, a former Marxist revolutionary, does not squeeze out a first- round victory and is forced into a runoff next month, analysts expect him to lose, because the country's strong anti-Ortega opposition would unite against him.

But this time, he has been ahead in polls throughout the campaign and stands to benefit from a change in election rules pushed through by his party, the Sandinista National Liberation Front, that lowered the threshold for victory. This time, a candidate needs 35 percent of the vote and a five-percentage-point lead over the nearest opponent. Previously, candidates needed 40 percent of the vote to gain the presidency.

Sunday, November 05, 2006

Rumsfeld Must Go

Original article here.

“Rumsfeld has lost credibility with the uniformed leadership, with the troops, with Congress and with the public at large. His strategy has failed, and his ability to lead is compromised. And although the blame for our failures in Iraq rests with the secretary, it will be the troops who bear its brunt,” the editorial says, according to an advance copy released Friday. “Donald Rumsfeld must go.”

The editorial will run in the 250,000 copies of Army Times, Navy Times, Marine Corps Times and Air Force Times. The newspapers are published under the umbrella Military Times Media Group by Gannett Co., not by the U.S. military, and have been popular among U.S. forces since World War II.

Hmmmm. Reminds me of Batiste. Funny all the stuff he said was treated as partisan slander by the right two or three weeks before they all started saying the same things. Just today Rob agreed that 400,000 troops would be needed for invasion and containment in the post invasion Iraq.

Thursday, November 02, 2006

The Coolest Digital Camera Ever

Get out your wallet. 30,000 Euros is a lot of cash, but if you can afford it… This sucker is a 160 megapixel camera. One full res uncompressed shot is almost a gig (950mb). Screw flash cards, this sucker shoots right to a hard drive. Full res is a 7500x21250 pixel panoramic shot. That is a 2’x5.5’ photo quality print… even at a very picky res like 320 dpi (which is where most wet chemistry photo printers max out). Damn.

Princeton Demonstrates the Ease of Hacking an Electronic Voting Machine

Concurrently posted at The Arbuckle Institute.



...and people are wondering why Karl Rove is so quiet and confident?

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Vermont to Vote in 1st Socialist ever to US Senate

Bernie Sanders, self described socialist, is set to win Vermont’s open Senate seat with 65-70% of the vote. His challenger, Rich Tarrant, has spent a record amount of his own money on the race, only to get thoroughly beaten. See the whole article.

Polls show Bernard Sanders, who has served for nearly 16 years as Vermont’s lone member of the House of Representatives, is well ahead in the race to succeed Sen. Jim Jeffords, an independent who isn’t seeking re-election. The state’s Democrats didn’t field an opponent, and Sanders has consistently led wealthy businessman Richard Tarrant, the Republican candidate who is funding his own campaign, by more than 20 percentage points in surveys.

“Bernie is very much beloved at this point in time,” said Peter Freyne, a columnist for Seven Days, Vermont’s alternative weekly newspaper. “He’s going to get 65, maybe 70 percent of the vote.”

The state’s famed ice cream entrepreneurs — Ben & Jerry — even appear in a TV spot for the 65-year-old Sanders, who has long described himself as a democratic socialist.

“I don’t think of Bernie in that way. It’s just a label that tends to get all sorts of reactions from people,” said Jerry Greenfield, who set the state standard for do-gooder capitalism with his partner, Ben Cohen. “To me, he’s somebody who for years has been fighting for the little guy.”

“He’s a populist,” said the multimillionaire Greenfield.

Sanders’ popularity comes despite a personality that could be described as prickly. His manner comes closer to that of the catamount — the New England name for a mountain lion — than of the kindly grandfather that his rumpled appearance suggests.

“He always seems angry,” said Sara Gear Boyd, a longtime Republican National Committee member. “Bernie Sanders hasn’t changed what he says for 30 years.”

“I’ve known him a long time, and it is hard to warm up to him,” echoed Garrison Nelson, a University of Vermont political science professor. “He’s not very humorous. He often walks around like he’s carrying the weight of the world on his shoulders.”

“But then, Vermont is an underdog kind of a state.”

But he breaks with most congressional progressives on federal gun control. Gun regulation should be left to the states, he said, "and shouldn't be done in Washington."

In 1990, Sanders' position on guns helped him defeat incumbent Congressman Peter Smith, who had voted for a bill banning sales of semi-automatic weapons. The National Rifle Association sided with the socialist against the Republican.

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Film Review: S21 - The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine

I saw this film the other day and it was a bit dark, but very informative. The things that happened under the Khmer Rouge were horrendous: bleeding of victims to supply blood bank until they were emptied of their blood and they chirped like crickets when they breathed and died, torture and brutal executions, and forced biographies of false treasonous acts. They executed people by beating them in the back of the neck with a rod and then slitting their throats.

They did interviews with many guards and torturers as well as a few detainees who ended up living. The most bizarre thing was how these normal people could become so cold and ruthless. Some spoke about the US fighting in Cambodia in the early 1970s and the need for what he saw as patriotic fighters so they fought. What was interesting about it was the manner in which the US helped motivate the push for the communist government of the Khmer Rouge by invading. Moderate citizens saw an opportunity to fight for their own sovereignty. They then became indoctrinated with fear - everyone became a spy who spied on everyone but themselves.
The survivors discussed the difference between 'destroying' and 'killing'. The Khmer Rouge killed 2 million people.

Saturday, October 28, 2006

Non-Lethal Godzilla Trap

Have a pesky giant reptilian monster terrorizing the neighborhood? I do and I finally found a non-lethal trap to catch it with. Even the vegan animal lovers like Dave_Comet will love this trap. Now all I need to so is start saving - this sucker is $250,000 on sale from $320,000.

What Damage does Godzilla do?
Godzilla will wipe out small to medium sized cities. This includes any cities with large Asian populations.

What bait should I use for Godzilla?
Any buildings, but Godzilla prefers any moving objects, above ground trains are a favorite.

Where should I place Godzilla traps?
Godzilla traps are best placed in coastal cities, near large buildings. 78 people required to set trap spring. Shipping not included on this item.

I’m surprised the Dept. of Homeland Security hasn’t ordered these in bulk, just to be sure, but from what I hear they blew all their money on Nordic-Track exercisers and expensive wall art for their offices.

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Secessionists to Meet in Vermont to Share Ideas

Representatives from both red and blue states appear to be joining in — although “joining” is probably not the right word. According to the Web site MiddleburyInstitute.net, responses as of June had come from “Hawaii Nation, Alaska Independence Party, League of the South and several of its chapters, Southern National Congress Committee, Southern Caucus, Christian Exodus, New State Movement, Puerto Rico Independence Party, Parti Quebecois, the State of Jefferson, and the Second Vermont Republic.”

Sunday, October 22, 2006

Rush Limbaugh Endorses Joe Lieberman

I actually heard it. Some poor fellow called in from Connecticut and began talking about how proud he was to be supporting the GOP candidate no matter what and Rush suggested Lieberman had a chip on his shoulder and would have revenge to take out on the Dems if elected?!?!? I thought my ears were hallucinating, but no… it was a veridical experience. Rush said he knew what the poor Republican from Connecticut was thinking but then continued on to endorse the leftist Lieberman.
See here.

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