Tuesday, December 23, 2008

I need to start this up again. Take a day and get it in working order. Then take another day and start one for work. Then take a week and train everyone how to use the work one. yay?

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

crunching the numbers..

if obama wins any two of these;
Pennsylvania, Georgia, Indiana, North Carolina, Florida, Missouri, Virginia, or Ohio;
He will win.

Monday, November 3, 2008

A Special Election Announcement

Dear everyone,

On the eve of this election I implore each of you to research the presidential candidates. There are MORE THAN TWO on each ballot. Many states, like Kentucky, are not swing states. This affords the residents in these states a special opportunity.
People of non-swing states: It does not matter who you vote for.
Kentucky is going Red. California is going Blue.
I’m not suggesting staying home tomorrow. I’m suggesting getting online and finding the candidate who best shares your views. Kentucky has four Presidential/VP teams on the ballot (Libertarian and constitution parties, California has 11 third party candidates, I believe). Hell, give it some thought and come up with a good write-in candidate (LA Gov. Bobby Jindal, or Jim Beam)

If your vote won’t matter, you can make it count by casting it for a party who speaks to you more than the Big Two. Showing support to third parties is the easiest way to show the major parties which direction to go.

And if you’re in a swing state: disregard everything I said and vote for one major parties. Make your vote truly count.

Monday, October 27, 2008

netflix....

looking back on this experiment I probably shouldn't have sent them in on a Friday. Monday would probably work better, but not next Monday since I don't think that the mail runs on Election Day.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Nexfilx Expieriment

To find out just how much longer it takes shipping from the office, I dropped a vid in the Post Office drop-box in Murray (pickup time 7:30 AM) and this morning put one in the drop box here at work (pickup time God Knows When). Now we sit back and wait.

Monday, April 28, 2008

Yes, I call them dunces

Jonathan Swift wrote "When a true genius appears in the world, you may know him by this sign, that the dunces are all in confederacy against him." Sadly he writes nothing of when dunces are in cahoots against each other.
Any legislative session is filled with bills that are proposed and never leave committee. Bills are assigned to a committee and debated so every bill will not take up precious time on the floor. With the Kentucky assembly only meeting for 99 days there are certain things that must be done for the commonwealth of Kentucky to maintain operations. The legislature has 99 days to approve a budget, the only act it is required to do. They finally approved a proposed budget on the last available day, and only by stopping the clocks a little before midnight did it get it done.
During the previous 98 days the Kentucky Assembly approved 179 proposed laws out of the more than one thousand bills filed for this legislative session. Of the 179 news laws and regulations approved by the Assembly there are some that help homeowners achieve energy efficiency and others that increase the amount of college aid available for Kentucky students. There are others, such as the controversial casino gambling bill and the stopping of mountain top removal mining bill, that were very publicly stopped in their tracks. But there were yet more, such as SB 17 (08RS), that were pushed to the wayside for more mainstream causes.
The bill, “An act relating to the promotion of physical activity in schools” was written to help fight the rising problem of childhood obesity by mandating a physical activity requirement for elementary and middle school children. It would require at least 30 minutes a day of structured physical activity beginning in the 2008-2009 school year.
The federal Department of Health and Human Services has released statistics saying that over seventeen percent of adolescents are at least overweight, leading to a higher risk of diabetes and heart problems, and Kentucky is no exception. The Trust for America’s Health found that in 2004, the last year data had been collected, Kentucky ranked third in the states with the most overweight children with over twenty percent of the age group considered overweight.
While the Assembly is busy with a myriad of other pressing problems they will have to deal with this problem eventually, only by then it won’t be childhood obesity but the harder to control, economy draining adult kind.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

zach with a shiny objecy


zach with a shiny objecy, originally uploaded by morndry.