" /> Non Fluffy Wicca: July 2006 Archives

« June 2006 | Main | August 2006 »

July 31, 2006

It's About Time Someone Sued This Lunatic Bunch

It's really too bad that this creepy bunch of anti-human cretins continue to disrupt grieving families when they are at their weakest, but it's good that one father is standing up to them. I can't think of anything more apt to intentionally inflict emotional distress on others than someone saying that it's great that your loved one died.Let's hope that this suit helps to stop the hatred being portrayed by this useless bunch of losers.

Funeral Picketers Sued By Marine's Dad, Lawsuit Claims Anti-Gay Church Furthers Grief For Families Of Dead - CBS News:


On Friday, July 7, Army 1st Lieutenant Forrest P. Ewens was buried at a respectful ceremony in Arlington National Cemetery, which many consider to be the most hallowed ground in the United States.

But the peace was disrupted by protests from members of the Westboro Baptist Church of Topeka, Kansas. In a cordoned-off area by the entrance to the cemetery, they carried signs with anti-gay and anti-American slogans and proclaimed that Ewens' death in Afghanistan on June 16 was another sign of God's impeding doom on the nation.

Westboro has taken what it calls "love crusades" to military funerals across the country. The church was not protesting at the funeral because Ewens was gay, but because he died, in their view, serving a country that has incurred the wrath of God by accepting and tolerating homosexuality.


ABA Report Criticizes Inappropriate Use of Signing Statements

A thoroughly fascinating read, and something that deserves a lot more coverage than it is getting (as I've complained about before).

ACSBlog: The Blog of the American Constitution Society: ABA Report Criticizes Inappropriate Use of Signing Statements:


The American Bar Association's Task Force on Presidential Signing Statements and the Separation of Powers Doctrine released its Final Report with Recommendations today, in which it criticized President Bush's use of presidential signing statements to avoid enforcing laws passed by Congress. To date, the administration has issued over 800 signing statements challenging the constitutionality of bills signed by the President, about 200 more than all previous presidents combined. Moreover, many of Bush's statements have claimed the right to decline enforcement despite clear precedent to the contrary. Neil Kinkopf recently addressed the issue of signing statements in an ACS issue brief, Signing Statements and the President's Authority to Refuse to Enforce the Law. For a news account of the ABA's release of their report, check out Robert Pear's article in The New York Times.

July 30, 2006

Trying My Hand at Salt Water Fishie Tanks

It was a typical story. The child came home with guppies from school meaning I had to get her a fish tank to put them in. This, of course, got me to thinking about why I didn't have a fish tank, and how I'd always admired cool salt water tanks. Thought turned to action and I bought a small 24 gallon salt water set up with various and assorted parts. The story of tank setup and what I've stocked it with thus far and ongoing trials and tribulations are at my new salt fishie blog called Reefer Madness .

Since I'm totally annoyed by the idea of catching fish in the ocean by use of poison or stunning techniques, or other nasty means, then transporting them halfway around the world to put in my tank because I think they're pretty, I am buying "aquacultured" animals and invertebrates as often as possible. The good news is that now more groups are raising corals, fishies, etc. on their own rather than relying on wild caught creatures. It's better for the environment, it's better for the fish, and it's better for the tank owner in having a healthier fish who isn't totally stressed out. More power to those who are working to have a hobby in accordance with nature.

As an aside, I was trying out iWeb and publishing to .mac for the reef tank blog, and I have to say that it's amazingly simple. Once again Apple does something good. Go figure :-)

The Little Cardinal

This morning there was a SMASH on the downstairs french doors, loud enough to go and check. Sitting on the ground on the side of the path was a beautiful little red and yellowish green cardinal, who looked like a female but smaller than an adult. She didn't look like a baby with their squat body body and crop sticking out, and it was very clear that she could fly, just not right at that particular moment. So I went and sat with her to make sure nobody like our feral cats or the evil doggies would bother her. Unfortunately, at that point Wes, not knowing that the bird was there, let the dogs out. So I scooped her up and took her into the house and put her in one of the dog cages to recover.

The little cardinal recovered rapidly and slithered between the bars of the cage and started flying around the bathroom, feeping. This was a clue that she was ok :-). I scooped her up again and took her outside where someone in the trees was feeping for her. She feeped back, and took off towards the sound.

Bye bye little birdie :-).

July 25, 2006

CNN.com - Medieval book of psalms unearthed - Jul 25, 2006

CNN.com - Medieval book of psalms unearthed - Jul 25, 2006:


DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) -- Irish archaeologists Tuesday heralded the discovery of an ancient book of psalms by a construction worker while driving the shovel of his backhoe into a bog.

The approximately 20-page book has been dated to the years 800-1000. Trinity College manuscripts expert Bernard Meehan said it was the first discovery of an Irish early medieval document in two centuries.

"This is really a miracle find," said Pat Wallace, director of the National Museum of Ireland, which has the book stored in refrigeration. Researchers will conduct years of painstaking analysis before putting the book on public display.

"There's two sets of odds that make this discovery really way out," Wallace said. "First of all, it's unlikely that something this fragile could survive buried in a bog at all, and then for it to be unearthed and spotted before it was destroyed is incalculably more amazing."

July 20, 2006

How shallow the claims of the telcos

The "Net Neutrality" debate is one that I've largely stayed on the sidelines of. Not because I don't believe that consumers should have the freedom to choose whatever content they desire, subject to the bandwidth that they have purchased, but mostly because the "powers that be" have essentially turned everything regarding an Internet used first for communication and second for commerce directly on its head. Arguments against "them" are touted as consensus. And basically, the whole thing becomes painful and annoying. I should know. I've been fighting with those who insist that the Net has classes of citizenship (one for the corporate sponsors, one for the geeks, and one for the users) for almost 20 years now.

So what have I learned in those 20 years? Those that have the gold makes the rules, even if their previous attempts have failed so totally that they have to purchase the successes of others, pretend they created it themselves, and then steamroll anyone who was there before and remembers their bumbling prior acts. Thus it has been with telcos who woke up one morning and found that computer networking, which they had tried to destroy back in the 50s, was alive and well and living in several different places, from CompuServ, and AOL, and BBS systems, and FIDOnet etc., all in forms they had no direct control over. They sat back and watched things grow and morph and mutate into a more coherent Internet, then decided that what they needed to do was to set up their OWN conduit in hopes of recapturing their lost control. However, when they were no longer the monopoly player, they found that important things like customer service, reliability, and cost were important issues that would cause customers to actually go elsewhere! They basically gave up, but obviously still wished to maintain control, or at least a revenue stream over all of this communication that is going on despite them.

Then other corporations woke up and found that people were happily using it long before they even dreamed of booting up in the latest version of Windoze, and decided to change all the rules to suit them, take the domain names already in use, then label themselves "content providers" and the rest of us are "passive consumers."

So what's going to happen with "Net Neutrality?" The Telcos will convince (through their very high paid lobbyists) the Congress Critters who still can't boot their own machines, that the only way they can provide the high speed service that people are crying for, is to somehow (they don't tell us how yet) decide for those "passive consumers" what they really need. Arguments like John Quarterman's below will likely be conveniently ignored in the onslaught, and we will all lose. I still have a tiny shred of hope somewhere in there, but I've been disappointed SO many times before that I'm definitely not willing to bet on it.

Real Fast Broadband:


OK, I think I saw some confirming comments about my interpretation of Softbank ADSL's 50Mbps for $25/mo. offering.


For those who don't read Japanese, Try this.


Meanwhile, NTT has decided to get more subscribers than Yahoo Japan by using Fiber to the Home (FTTH). How fast is that? $100Mbps for $31/month.


Show me any U.S. city where individuals can by Internet access at speeds anywhere near that for prices anywhere like that.


Meanwhile, the company that started Japan's most recent broadband push, Softbank, is profitable.


And while U.S. telcos complain they need special treatment to do what Softbank and NTT have already done, NTT is already branching out overseas, offering 100Mbps in other countries. As a demonstration, it broadcast Superbowl XL back to Japan in high definition.


Hey, maybe that's how we'll finally get fast broadband stateside!


-jsq

Tut's gem hints at space impact

Tut's gem hints at space impact:


In 1996 in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, Italian mineralogist Vincenzo de Michele spotted an unusual yellow-green gem in the middle of one of Tutankhamun's necklaces. The jewel was tested and found to be glass, but intriguingly it is older than the earliest Egyptian civilisation. Working with Egyptian geologist Aly Barakat, they traced its origins to unexplained chunks of glass found scattered in the sand in a remote region of the Sahara Desert. But the glass is itself a scientific enigma. How did it get to be there and who or what made it? Sky of fire An Austrian astrochemist Christian Koeberl had established that the glass had been formed at a temperature so hot that there could be only one known cause: a meteorite impacting with Earth. And yet there were no signs of an impact crater, even in satellite images.

Do Not Feed the Homeless

reviewjournal.com -- News - Feeding homeless outlawed:


f someone looks like he could use a meal, be warned: Giving him a sandwich in a Las Vegas park could land you in jail.

The Las Vegas City Council passed an ordinance Wednesday that bans providing food or meals to the indigent for free or a nominal fee in parks.

The measure is an attempt to stop so-called "mobile soup kitchens" from operating in parks, where residents say they attract the homeless and render the city facilities unusable by families.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Nevada called the ordinance blatantly unconstitutional, unenforceable and the latest attempt by the city to hide and harass the homeless instead of constructively addressing their plight.

"So the only people who get to eat are those who have enough money? Those who get (government) assistance can't eat at your picnic?" asked ACLU attorney Allen Lichtenstein. "I've heard of some rather strange and extreme measures from other cities. I've never heard of something like this. It's mind-boggling."

Asatru Killer asks for stay of execution

It seriously bugs me that this case has been cast in such a strange light. If a Christian had committed murder, the headline would not be Baptist Killer asks for stay of execution. That notwithstanding, as most juries are prohibited from using "outside sources" to determine whether or not a convicted murderer should be put to death, use of the Bible or any other outside book should automatically serve to commute a sentence from death to life in prison without parole. It's much less about religion and much more about legalities.

Asatru Killer asks for stay of execution:


By KRISTEN GELINEAU



A man slated to be put to death next week for the slaying of a fellow inmate during a Nordic pagan ceremony asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday to grant him a stay of execution. Michael Lenz, 42, is scheduled to die by injection July 27 at Greensville Correctional Center in Jarratt for the fatal stabbing of Brent Parker.



In their petition to the high court, Lenz's attorneys contend jurors in Lenz's case admitted they'd consulted a Bible during their sentencing deliberations, and that one jury member said some jurors pointed to passages in the Bible that supported the death penalty for killers. Lenz's attorneys argue the jurors' consultation of the Bible was an outside influence that denied Lenz the right to a fair and impartial trial.

July 19, 2006

Virtual world tests telepathy | CNET News.com

Virtual world tests telepathy | CNET News.com:


Scientists at the University of Manchester have created a virtual world to test telepathic ability.

Participants in a trial will wear a head-mounted 3D display and an electronic glove to navigate their way through a computer-generated world.

The people in the trial are placed in separate rooms on different floors of a building to eliminate any possibility of communication.

One will view a random selection of computer-generated objects--such as a telephone, a football and an umbrella--and will be asked to concentrate on and interact with one of them.

>A second participant is simultaneously presented with the chosen object, plus three decoy objects, and asked to guess which object the other person is trying to transmit.

The system has been designed to make the task as realistic as possible. In addition to selecting objects and hearing the sounds they make, participants are able to hold and move them within the virtual environment.

"By creating a virtual environment, we are creating a completely objective environment, which makes it impossible for participants to leave signals or even unconscious clues as to which object they have chosen," Toby Howard of the university's School of Computer Science said in a statement.

The results of the experiment are expected to be published early in 2007.

July 18, 2006

How cool! This story on Tarot came from Pravda

The wisdom of Tarot Cards was created for centuries:


The Tarot cards first appeared in Europe in the 14th century. Some sources say they appeared supposedly about 1370. However, the origin of the cards is not yet defined exactly. Majority of researchers believe that Gypsies practicing card-reading brought them to Europe, or probably that the cards came together with knights who came back from crusades in the East

July 07, 2006

Busted for wearing a peace T-shirt; has this country gone completely insane?

After reading this article (thanks Frog) I got a headache. A literal headache. What IS happening to this country indeed? And he's right, if his T shirt said "Veterans for Tits" it would have likely been allowed, despite its sexist connotation. And you know something, we sit here and we take it. If I was an attorney in Chicago, I'd truly be tempted to take this case. As it was, i forwarded it to some who might.

Busted for wearing a peace T-shirt; has this country gone completely insane?:


Busted for wearing a peace T-shirt; has this country gone completely insane?
By Mike Ferner
Online Journal Contributing Writer


Jul 5, 2006, 01:49

Email this article
 Printer friendly page
Friday afternoon, drinking a cup of coffee while sitting in the Jesse Brown V.A. Medical Center on Chicago's south side, a Veterans Administration cop walked up to me and said, "Okay, you've had your 15 minutes, it's time to go."

"Huh?" I asked intelligently, not quite sure what he was talking about.

"You can't be in here protesting," Officer Adkins said, pointing to my Veterans For Peace shirt.

"Well, I'm not protesting, I'm having a cup of coffee," I returned, thinking that logic would convince Adkins to go back to his earlier duties of guarding against serious terrorists.

Flipping his badge open, he said, "No, not with that shirt. You're protesting and you have to go."

Beginning to get his drift, I said firmly, "Not before I finish my coffee."

He insisted that I leave, but still not quite believing my ears, I tried one more approach to reason.

"Hey, listen. I'm a veteran. This is a V.A. facility. I'm sitting here not talking to anybody, having a cup of coffee. I'm not protesting and you can't kick me out."

"You'll either go or we'll arrest you," Adkins threatened.

"Well, you'll just have to arrest me," I said, wondering what strange land I was now living in.

You know the rest. Handcuffed, led away to the facility's security office, past people with surprised looks on their faces, read my rights, searched, and written up.

July 06, 2006

Woman says firm fired her for being Wiccan

Shades of what could have been with me. A co-worker actually also called me a devil worshipper essentially after he "discovered" I was Wiccan by digging through web links and checking up on me. As I've previously mentioned, I never wear religious jewelry or otherwise identify myself as Wiccan when dealing with co-workers or clients (unless they've found me through religious channels....). So, if it can happen to me, it can most certainly happen to others

Woman says firm fired her for being Wiccan:


A Schaumburg company allegedly fired a woman, and one employee is accused of calling her a "devil worshipper" after she disclosed she practiced Wicca -- a pagan religion viewed by some as witchcraft.

Now, the woman is suing.

Rebecca Sommers said the company fired her in 2004, citing poor job performance. She had worked with the firm since 2002.

But Sommers insists in a federal lawsuit filed Wednesday that Crawford & Company Inc. fired her because supervisors there didn't like her religion.

Crawford is a Georgia-based insurance adjusting firm with an office in Schaumburg. Representatives there could not be reached for comment Wednesday.

Sommers, an accounts analyst, said when she requested a day off for a Wiccan holiday, she was told by a manager to keep her religion "to herself." She said another supervisor who knew she practiced Wicca called her a devil worshipper in front of other employees.

Sommers said that before revealing her religion she received a favorable review and a bonus. But after her supervisors knew about Wicca, she started getting warnings and told she wasn't returning customer calls fast enough.

Sommers is seeking back pay, compensatory and punitive damages.