Wednesday, December 31, 2003

Thursday, December 11, 2003

"Let the woman learn in silence with all subjection. But I suffer not a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence" (King James Bible - 1 Timothy 2:11-12).

Christianity is such an enlightened faith, don't you think?

Tuesday, December 09, 2003

The IPv6 Mess
"almost half of all articles published in [medical] journals are by ghostwriters [representing pharmaceutical companies]" -- Massive fraud in the pharmaceutical industry

Monday, December 08, 2003

Some lessons from programming language flamewars

Wednesday, December 03, 2003

Sunday, November 23, 2003

General Tommy Franks predicts marial law in the case of a major WMD attack on the US

Wednesday, October 29, 2003

Real Programs Dump Core
CCured analyzes the C program to determine the smallest number of run-time checks that must be inserted in the program to prevent all memory safety violations. The resulting program is memory safe, meaning that it will stop rather than overrun a buffer or scribble over memory that it shouldn't touch.

Monday, September 08, 2003

The Myths of IPv6
"The P10 is a totally self-contained 40-150 psi ribbed paraboloid (egg shape) underground disaster shelter designed to protect up to 10 people for long periods or 20 people for short durations such as during tornadoes. The product was specifically designed and developed to protect people during and after disasters such as tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes, storms, forest fires, power failures, nuclear power plant accidents, nuclear/chemical terrorism, and full-scale protracted nuclear, chemical and biological war."
"Reaction time is a factor in this, so please pay attention. Now, answer as quickly as you can."

"You’re in a desert walking along in the sand when all of the sudden you look down and you see a tortoise... it’s crawling toward you. You reach down, you flip the tortoise over on its back... The tortoise lays on its back, its belly baking in the hot sun, beating its legs trying to turn itself over, but it can’t, not without your help. But you’re not helping."

San Francisco mayoral candidates take the Voight-Kampff Test

Saturday, September 06, 2003

"Honestly, I think we should just trust our president in every decision that he makes and we should just support that." --Britney Spears

Friday, September 05, 2003

"The Treaty of Tripoli, written during the administration of President George Washington, signed by President John Adams, and unanimously approved by the Senate, stated, "The Government of the United States is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion.""

Tuesday, September 02, 2003

"So widely is spread the itch of literary praise, that almost every man is an author, either in act or in purpose" --Samuel Johnson, 1753

Monday, September 01, 2003

"Many rock bands drink blood along with taking drugs to "let the demons come through," so they'll be given greater insights to hypnotize the public with their music."

"All bands, in some way or another, use devil symbols, signs, rituals, sex, and drugs to enhance their music. Satanists say, "These symbols open the doorways for Lucifer and his minions to come in and possess." But that's not all..."

Friday, August 29, 2003

"[An inmate] claimed me as his property and I didnt dispute it. I became obedient, telling myself at least I was surviving . . . . He publicly humiliated and degraded me, making sure all the inmates and gaurds knew that I was a queen and his property. Within a week he was pimping me out to other inmates at $3.00 a man. This state of existence continued for two months until he sold me for $25.00 to another black male who purchased me to be his wife."

"'You will clean the house,' he said, 'have my clothes clean and when Im ready to get my 'freak' no arguments or there will be a punishment! I will,' he said, 'let my homeboys have you or Ill just sale you off. Do we have an understanding?' With fear, misery, and confusion inside me . . . I said yes"

No Escape: Mare Rape in U.S. Prisons

Word of the Day
sclerotic: grown rigid or unresponsive, especially with age

Tuesday, August 19, 2003


"Child With Bicycle"


"Blue Nude Dressing"


"Lenape Jesus" (1968), showing Christ on a merry-go-round, menaced by "The Dark Crowd."

Tom Bostelle

"If your workplace is safe... if your children go to school rather being forced in to labor... if you are paid a living wage, including overtime... if you enjoy a 40 hour week and are allowed to join a union to protect your rights, you can thank liberals."

"If your food is not poisoned and your water is drinkable, you can thank liberals."

"If your parents are eligible for medicare and social security so they can grow old in dignity without bankrupting your family, you can thank liberals."

"If our rivers are getting cleaner and our air isn't black with polution, if our wilderness is protected and our countryside still green you can thank liberals."

"If people of all races can share the same public facilities... if everyone has the right to vote... if couples fall in love and marry regardless of race... if we have finally begun to transcend a segregated society, you should thank liberals"

Joe Conason, Big Lies: How the right-wing propaganda machine demonizes liberals and distorts the common-sense politics of America

There's a great debate between Conanson and some conservative talk show host here

It starts around the 60min mark on that mp3, and gets good 10-15mins in to it.


You never know what you'll find using a Random Image Search

Wednesday, August 06, 2003

"...a nearby [U.S.] soldier began kicking [the journalist] and then another four or five soldiers took him to the ground, removed the safeties from their weapons, aimed their guns at his head and continued to kick at him repeatedly..."

"U.S. troops then confiscated his camera as they tied his arms behind his back with wire and proceeded to detain him in a nearby military vehicle for about one hour..."

"The Bush administration is actively seeking to gag or punish social service organizations that challenge the party line... Nonprofits that disagree with the president's own solutions, or go further and blame him for problems in the first place, have come to expect unpleasant consequences..."

"'If you disagree with the administration on ideological grounds, they're going to come down with a hammer. This has huge implications for the free flow of speech in this country,' says Gary Bass, executive director of OMB Watch, itself a nonprofit, which released the report last week as part of its 20-year-old mission to monitor White House budget and spending decisions."

Tuesday, July 22, 2003

Contemporary Witnesses write "Against Forgetting" of the Hamburg bombing, which claimed 40,000 lives in a single day
"My holidays in the axis of evil"
PNAC.info - Exposing the Project for the New American Century

Tuesday, July 15, 2003

Word of the day:

invidious

1. tending to cause discontent, animosity, or envy
2. envious
3. of an unpleasant or objectionable nature: obnoxious

Friday, July 04, 2003

Congress witholding military aid from countries which are refusing to grant the US immunity from prosecution in the International Criminal Court
Judge your dates by their drinks

Thursday, July 03, 2003

"The first most teenagers hear of Tranquility is therefore when they are woken from their beds at home at 4am by guards, who place them in a van, handcuffed if necessary, drive them to an airport and fly them to Jamaica..."
Silence by Leonid Andreyev

Wednesday, July 02, 2003

Preservation Tips

"When you are in the middle of reading a book, and you need to stop, what do you use to hold your place? I shudder at some of the answers I have heard! The most outlandish one is a slab of raw bacon. Obviously, that should not be used for a host of reasons (no food products, please).

Another thing some people tend to do is turn the corner of the page over. Damaging the book is never a good idea. Other offenders include: hacksaw blade, pencils or pens, gum wrappers, and post-it note papers. The correct answer is a bookmark (preferably made from acid-free paper or card stock). If a bookmark is not acid-free (or you are uncertain), make sure you remove it (as well as any other papers) when you are finished with the book."

(from July's NYS Library Information Bulletin)

(Thanks to Jesse)

Friday, June 27, 2003

"Scientific investigation, which starts from common sense naturalism, arrives back at a contrary conclusion: we cannot trust our senses to tell us the true nature of reality. This is still also where the physical sciences of today meet their final limits in the attempt to establish the truth by physical experimentation. Their outgoing search for reality reveals the emptiness of physical appearances and eventually dissolves the very belief that reality is nothing but physical nature. Science brings its followers to the limits of the materialistic fallacy, and philosophical insight must begin all over again."

Science and the Demise of Philosophy

Digital Book Index

Tuesday, June 17, 2003

"The hope to change the world is a childish illusion. You have to change yourself." --Marie-Louise Von Franz

Saturday, June 14, 2003

"...we decided that we wanted to make a personal ad system for people like ourselves: jaded, sarcastic wankers... we guaranetee that you will look wittier on this system than on any other!" --Ãœber Personals

Wednesday, June 11, 2003

A dedicated neurophisiologist writing to his wife:

My dear.

I Have long thought of myself as an acute and well-informed interpreter of your behaviour. I think I have been able to identify nearly every thought that has made you smile! My research has even made such a progress that I no longer need to understand you IN THIS WAY. I'm happy to say I'm now in a position, with the aid of an apparatus which I shall promptly attach you, to assign to each body movement you make a specific antecedent condition in your cortex.

In the meantime, perhaps you would have dinner with me tonight.

I trust you will not resist if I bring along this apparatus then to help me determine, as quickly as possible, the physiological idiosyncracies which obtain in your system.

Monday, June 09, 2003

"That sand into which we bury ourselves in order not to see, is formed of words..." --Georges Bataille

Sunday, June 08, 2003

"When my son was four or five years old, he asked one of those interminable questions that children ask: "Why does the sky get dark at night?"

Eager to increase his understanding, I put a lamp in the middle of the floor to act as the sun, got down the world globe, and used a tennis ball for the moon. Then I walked around the "sun", carrying the globe and turning it, explaining how we are suspended in space, constantly moving. It was the universe in a nutshell - sun, earth, moon, stars, seasons.

My son watched the production with silent, squint-eyed attention. When I finished, he said to me, "You don't expect me to believe that, do you?"

Wynette Barton

Wednesday, June 04, 2003

Monday, June 02, 2003

R.Z. is a thirty-five year old man... A single man, he lives alone and does not work. His main activity is photographing the landscape that he sees from his window. He regularly shows these photographs to his therapist and comments on them: "Here there is a car." "There, the car did not move during the night." "This is the same car on another day, there are dead leaves on the roof." He says, "Time goes by, things do not change. I find time with photographs."

Rebuilding Reality: A Phenomenology of Aspects of Chronic Schizophrenia

Saturday, May 31, 2003


José Clemente Orozco
"One thing must be understood: I have said nothing extraordinary or even surprising. What is extraordinary begins at the moment I stop. But I am no longer able to speak of it." --Maurice Blanchot

Tuesday, May 27, 2003

"Her father stabbed her 12 times in the chest, and made sure that she was beyond recovery before he called the police and the ambulance to come and get her."

"..the United Nations conservatively estimates that 5,000 women a year are killed in this way, and the majority of those women are killed in Jordan and in the West Bank and Gaza Strip areas... and that's a very conservative estimate on the United Nations' part, because the majority of these crimes are later classified as suicides and accidental deaths"

Honor Killings in Jordan

Friday, May 23, 2003

""Operation Keelhaul!" To this day, it is an unavenged post-war crime of immeasurable cruelty committed by the Allies"

Thursday, May 22, 2003

"If you find an atheist in your neighborhood,
TELL A PARENT OR PASTOR RIGHT AWAY!

You may be moved to try and witness to these poor lost souls yourself, however
AVOID TALKING TO THEM!
Atheists are often very grumpy and bitter and will lash out at children or they may even try to trick you into neglecting God's Word.

Very advanced witnessing techniques are needed for these grouches. Let the adults handle them.
"

SETI signal verification attempts at Arecibo
Pics

Friday, May 16, 2003

Wednesday, May 14, 2003


Jake and Dinos Chapman
, Great Deeds Against the Dead

Damien Hirst
, Mother and Child Divided
on the acceptance of meteorites into scientific thinking : "If anyone were so credulous as to suggest that stones had fallen from the sky, he was reasoned with thus: In the first place, there are no stones in the sky; Therefore no stones can fall from the sky." "Even when meteorites were taken on board as being a genuine scientific phenomena, it was decreed that only objects of "True Meteoric Material" were meteorites, and that other material that fell had not come from space, but could be explained in the same fashion as meteorites had once been" --Charles Fort (first quote)

Tuesday, May 13, 2003

"...an excellent example of a good approximation of anti-entropic behaviour was given in the Xmas Royal Society Lectures this year. I big drum of colourless colloid had a vertical line of dye in it. It got stirred to smear the dye around and then *unstirred* to restore a fair semblance of a vertical blue line. My eyes nearly popped warching it!"

Jane Alexander

Monday, May 12, 2003

The Lighter Report

"Reserved for heretics and atheists (acording to my informant, who held a rare visiting fellowship), The Sixth Circle of Hell boasts the largest faculty of philosophers in the universe. Given its permanent endowment and aggressive recruiting methods, I expect the Sixth Circle to be the top- ranked philosophy department for quite some time, perhaps eternity. (But keep checking this space until then.) This school's secret? It's their retention program: faculty members are not permitted to leave, no matter how big the outside offer. The downside, of course, is that the worst damned philosophers gain effective tenure upon arrival. However, the distinguished senior faculty includes Socrates, Spinoza, Hobbes, Nietzsche, J.S. Mill, and Bertrand Russell, among many others."

Conference Alerts: Academic Conferences, worldside
Tips for the Top: How to be a Philosopher

Technique 1

"Begin by making a spurious distinction. Befuddle the reader with your analytic wizardry. The reader will enter a logical trance, from which she will be unable to recall the initial spurious distinction and will feel strangely compelled to accept your conclusions."

Sunday, May 11, 2003

"O Lord our God, help us to tear their soldiers to bloody shreds with our shells; help us to cover their smiling fields with the pale forms of their patriot dead; help us to drown the thunder of the guns with the shrieks of their wounded, writhing in pain; help us to lay waste their humble homes with a hurricane of fire. ... We ask it in the spirit of love, of Him Who is the source of love." --Mark Twain

Saturday, May 10, 2003

"Modern man has heard enough of guilt and sin. He is sorely beset by his own bad conscience, and wants rather to know how he can reconcile himself with his own nature, how he is to love the enemy in his own heart and call the wolf his brother.

The modern man does not want to know in what way he can immitate Christ, but in what way he can live his own individual life, however meager and uninteresting it may be. It is because every form of imitation seems to him deadening and sterile that he rebels against the force of tradition that would hold him to well trodden ways. All such roads for him lead in the wrong direction. He may not know it, but he behaves as if his own individual life were God's special will which must be fulfilled at all costs." --C.G. Jung

Friday, May 09, 2003

"The indifference of American public culture to the experiences of other peoples is reflected in the lack of work translated from foreign languages. Without translations, Americans, who are notoriously monolingual, have access only to the perspectives of those who write and speak in English; thus the ideas of millions are lost to them.

About 3% of the fiction and poetry published in the United States in 1999 was translated.

America compares unfavourably to almost every other country and most unfavourably to western Europe, the region closest to an ideological sibling... There, Germany translates the most works - about six times as many as the US each year. Spain is close behind, while the French publishing industry exceeds the US by four times.

Without translations, Americans, who are notoriously monolingual, have access only to the perspectives of those who write and speak in English; thus the ideas of millions are lost to them."

Tuesday, May 06, 2003

"Possibly we shall know a little more than we do now. But the real nature of things, that we shall never know, never." --Albert Einstein
Thomas Pynchon on 1984

Prison art
Ashcroft's detention camps for US citizens declared enemy combatants

Saturday, May 03, 2003

Thursday, May 01, 2003

Word of the day: appurtenance
Something added to another, more important thing; an appendage
Bush is trying to suppress the 911 report

Wednesday, April 30, 2003

One day, a little while after this, Satan appeared again. We were always watching out for him, for life was never very stagnant when he was by. He came upon us at that place in the woods where we had first met him. Being boys, we wanted to be entertained; we asked him to do a show for us.

"Very well," he said; "would you like to see a history of the progress of the human race? -- its development of that product which it calls civilization?"

Mark Twain "A History of War" from The Mysterious Stranger


"On Monday, April 17th, 2000 at about 8:30 am near the corner of 18th and K I was beaten by a plainclothes officer (not sure if fed or mpd) after photographing him going crazy though the streets hitting people over the headwith his baton. At the time I didn't even think it wasa cop! Wearing my Independent Media Center badge, I photographed this man, who I believed was an motorist angry about the traffic disruptions. After seeing me about to take the photograph of him, he lunged towards my neck with his hands and proceeded to club me at least two times with this club like device and pushed me to the ground. He then hit me several more times and wrestled the camera from my hands. I called for police to arrest this man still believing this was a case of road rage. Upon arrival the police officer (not sure if MPD,secret service or another agency) informed me that the man was a plainclothes officer."
More... and more...

Monday, April 21, 2003

"Ideas are more dangerous than guns. We don't allow our enemies guns, so why should we allow them ideas." --Joseph Stalin

Saturday, April 19, 2003

"Nature is a temple in which living columns sometimes emit confused words. Man approaches it through forests of symbols, which observe him with familiar glances." --Charles Baudelaire (1821 - 1867)
"All is mystery; but he is a slave who will not struggle to penetrate the dark veil." --Benjamin Disraeli (1804 - 1881)
Fake voice recordings easy to make, hard to detect
"People demand freedom of speech to make up for the freedom of thought which they avoid." --Soren Kierkegaard

Thursday, April 17, 2003

Debunking the "Expensive Procedure Call" Myth
or Procedure Call Implementations Considered Harmful
or Lambda: The Ultimate GOTO
netselect, an ultrafast intelligent parallelizing binary-search implementation of "ping."

Tuesday, April 15, 2003

"Put a spot of ink upon paper, fix your eye upon that spot, and retire to such a distance, that at last you lose sight of it; 'tis plain, that the moment before it vanish'd the image or impression was perfectly indivisible." --David Hume, 1739
"Astute observers of history are aware that for every notable event there will usually be at least one, often several wild conspiracy theories which spring up around it. "The CIA killed Hendrix" " The Pope had John Lennon murdered ", "Hitler was half Werewolf", "Space aliens replaced Nixon with a clone" etc,etc. The bigger the event, the more ridiculous and more numerous are the fanciful rantings which circulate in relation to it..."

"One of the wilder stories circulating about Sept 11, and one that has attracted something of a cult following amongst conspiracy buffs is that it was carried out by 19 fanatical Arab hijackers, masterminded by an evil genius named Osama bin Laden, with no apparent motivation other than that they 'hate our freedoms.'"

Saturday, April 12, 2003

"The influenza pandemic of 1918-1919 killed more people than the Great War, known today as World War I (WWI), at somewhere between 20 and 40 million people. It has been cited as the most devastating epidemic in recorded world history. More people died of influenza in a single year than in four-years of the Black Death Bubonic Plague from 1347 to 1351. Known as "Spanish Flu" or "La Grippe" the influenza of 1918-1919 was a global disaster."

Thursday, April 10, 2003

The executive producer of a CBS miniseries about Adolf Hitler's rise to power has been fired after giving an interview in which he compared the current mood of Americans to that of the Germans who helped Hitler rise to power

"It basically boils down to an entire nation gripped by fear, who ultimately chose to give up their civil rights and plunged the whole nation into war," Gernon said in the interview. "I can't think of a better time to examine this history than now."

How to be a Programmer

Stelarc
"If a distinguished but elderly scientist says something can be done he is probably right. On the other hand, if he says somthing cannot be done he is almost certainly wrong." --Arthur C. Clarke
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