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Chrissy-Mess

  ne Box   and   Paul Camp   commented. Active Paul Camp Favorites    ·  Y f e s t 0 a e r 1 d a y o   a t   2 : 0 9 f g 7 5 5   i 0 P M e l d    ·  Christmas has landed. My neighbor around the block does this every year the day after Thanksgiving. There are so many that half of it is in a borrowed part of his next door neighbor's yard. In addition to the Santas and penguins and stuff, there are 8, count 'em 8, manger scenes and not a single baby Jebus among them. One has a manger but it is empty. One has everyone gazing adoringly at the grass. Several have a variety of farm animals -- sheep, donkeys, shrunken camels -- at the focus. The group on the roof next to the Santa with the one cylinder sleigh is missing a Mary and has Joseph and the three wise guys looking down on the whole menagerie. And there is one that appears to be made out of fourth graders, which is just creepy. This blow molded plastic light bulb religion...

Too Little Too Late, or Bye Bye World; We Hardly Knew Ye

  A science fiction author whose blog I follow is optimistic that we will take some action to address climate change. I'm not optimistic at all. I think homo sapiens is already extinct, we just don't know it yet -- rather like Wile E. Coyote running off a cliff. Why? Because of Upton Sinclair. In "How I Ran For Governor of California and Got Licked," he wrote: "It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it." Why? Because evolution drives organisms to seek short term benefit for the most part. There are exceptions (like bees) but they are few and far between. For the most part, doing things that are detrimental in the short term but beneficial in the long term is a good way to not pass down your genes to subsequent generations. Why? Because of the Tragedy of the Commons, which is little more than the previous point written into human society. Few people will tolerate it if power does not come out of...

Eliminate the Debt Ceiling

 T he debate on the debt limit is Washington bulshittery. Here's the truth: 1. Increasing the debt limit has nothing at all to do with future spending. It has to be increased to pay for the spending that Congress has already authorized. Republicans know this but it is convenient to lie. Why? As a virtue signal to their base. 2. Congress is NEVER going to fail to authorize raising the debt limit. The consequences to the national and global economy are too dire to contemplate. Republicans know this too. The last time they got their knickers in a twist over the debt limit, the credit rating of the US was downgraded just on the remote chance that the GOP might drive off a cliff. 3. There is no reason to have a debt limit. When Congress authorizes spending or tax cuts it cannot then later on decide not to pay the bills. It is entirely the same as you buying something with a credit card and then refusing to pay your credit card bill. Furthermore, the very idea of a debt limit is a creati...

The Bird Dog of Alcatraz

  The Border Collie Science and Engineering Bowl Let me tell you about Hannah, the evil genius of border collies. She thinks like an engineer. When I ended up with four dogs, I decided to keep them in the basement when we were not home to limit home coming to smell like a kennel. Then I came home one day and everyone was running around the yard. Hannah figured out how to open the basement door, quite a feat since it has a round doorknob, and have an escape. So I padlocked it. Within about a week, I came home to Hannah running around the yard. She found that if she pushed hard enough, she could force a foundation vent out of the wall, creating a hole just big enough that she could squeeze through, and have an escape. So I created a barrier between her and the vent using plywood left over from other projects, bookshelves and so on. Within a few days, I came home and Hannah was running around the yard. She had completely emptied a shelf so she could squeeze through to reach the founda...

The Star Chamber Today

  The Star Chamber was an English court which sat at the royal Palace of Westminster, from the late 15th century to the mid-17th century, and was composed of Privy Counsellors and common-law judges, to supplement the judicial activities of the common-law and equity courts in civil and criminal matters. The Star Chamber was originally established to ensure the fair enforcement of laws against socially and politically prominent people so powerful that ordinary courts might hesitate to convict them of their crimes. However, it became synonymous with social and political oppression through the arbitrary use and abuse of the power it wielded. The Star Chamber was created during the reign of Henry VII (Henry Tudor), and was initially regarded one of the most just and efficient courts of the Tudor era. In addition to fair enforcement of the laws against the upper class, the Star Chamber also acted like a court of equity, which could impose punishment for actions which were deemed to be mo...