Obama: off to a good start

•January 29, 2009 • Leave a Comment

Only a week in office and already he’s reversing the Old Guard’s policies

Congress clears wage bill for first Obama signature
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Democratic-led U.S. Congress on Tuesday gave final approval to what may be the first bill signed into law by President Barack Obama — a measure to reverse a 2007 U.S. Supreme Court decision that made it tougher to sue for wage discrimination. (Editorial insert: HAH! TAKE THAT YOU JERKWATER REPUBLICAN POWER MONGERS!)

On a vote of 250-177, the House of Representatives passed the measure, which sailed through the Senate last week, 61-36.

The bill now goes to Obama, who took office one week ago after actively supporting the legislation last year while campaigning for the White House with the strong support of labor unions and women, who are paid 23 percent less than male workers in the United States.

A top priority of organized labor, the bill would lift tight time restraints to file claims that could expire before workers realize they were treated unfairly.

The measure would “correct a disastrous Supreme Court ruling that allows bad employers to discriminate against their employees as long as they hide it for 180 days,” said Illinois Democratic Representative Phil Hare in a debate on the House floor.

Republicans have agreed with many in the business community that the measure could trigger an explosion of lawsuits based on old claims, discourage employers from hiring women and undermine efforts to stem the recession. (Editorial insert again: dont want lawsuits? DONT ENGAGE IN DISCRIMINATORY PRACTICES!! )

“The bill invites more and costlier lawsuits,” said California Republican Representative Howard McKeon. (<– needs a shit present)

The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act is named for an Alabama woman who lost her wage discrimination lawsuit in the Supreme Court in 2007. After 19 years on the job, Ledbetter sued her employer when she discovered that she was the lowest-paid supervisor at the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co plant, despite having more experience than several male co-workers.

A jury found she was the victim of discrimination.

LEGAL PRECEDENT

But the Supreme Court, in a 5-4 ruling, reversed what critics described as decades of legal precedent by declaring discrimination claims must be filed within 180 days of the first offense.

The court rejected the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission‘s contention that each new discriminatory paycheck triggers a new 180-day statute of limitations.

The new bill would amend the 1964 Civil Rights Act by putting the old EEOC standard into law, and covering pay discrimination based on gender, race, national origin, religion, age and disabilities.

Having increased their control of Congress and taken the White House in the November elections, Democrats now expect to pass many bills previously stalled by Republicans, including ones to jolt the economy with massive new spending; ease global warming; lower drug prices for the elderly, and provide residents of Washington, D.C., a voting representative in the House.

Also on the list is a bill that would make it easier for unions to organize workers. But it is unclear whether Democrats will be able to muster the 60 votes to overcome a promised Republican procedural hurdle in the 100-member Senate.

And last week he did this:

Obama reverses “gag rule” on global family planning organizations

President Barack Obama today made the most contentious move of his young administration with an order, overturning a ban on federal funds to foreign family planning organisations that either offer abortions or provide information or counselling about abortion.

The rule change continues the dismantling of George Bush’s conservative policies. It is likely to encounter fierce criticism from the still robust anti-abortion movement.

It will allow US aid, usually through the US agency for international development, to flow to HIV/Aids clinics, birth-control providers and other organisations that advocate or provide counselling about abortion across the world. It is known as the “global gag rule” because it denies US taxpayer dollars to clinics that even mention abortion to women with unplanned pregnancies.

The rule was signed by President Ronald Reagan in 1984, overturned by Bill Clinton in 1993, and reinstated by Bush. Critics of the rule say it deprives the world’s poor women of desperately needed medical care, while proponents say US tax dollars should not promote abortion.

Family planning groups in America and the UK cheered the rule change. Dr Gill Greer, director general of London-based International Planned Parenthood Federation, estimated the gag rule had cost the group more than $100m for family planning and sexual and reproductive health programmes during the eight years of the Bush administration, which she said amounted to 36 million unplanned pregnancies and 15 million induced abortions.

“The gag rule has done immense harm and caused untold suffering to millions around the world,” she said in a statement. “It has undermined health systems and endangered the lives and health of the poorest and most vulnerable women on the planet by denying access to life saving family planning, sexual and reproductive health and HIV services and exposing them to the dangers of unsafe abortion.”

While Obama has spent the first two days of his presidency overturning Bush policies, for example restricting US interrogation practices of terror suspects and an order pledging to close the US prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, those were backed by a broad political consensus. Abortion, however, remains a bitterly contentious issue, as evidenced by the thousands of people who marched in Washington yesterday opposing abortion rights.

Yesterday was the 36th anniversary of the landmark Supreme Court decision Roe v Wade, which guaranteed a woman’s right to choose abortion.

While both Clinton and Bush used the Roe v Wade anniversary to change US policy on abortion, Obama declined yesterday. He instead issued a statement reaffirming his commitment “to protecting a woman’s right to choose”.

“On the 36th anniversary of Roe v Wade, we are reminded that this decision not only protects women’s health and reproductive freedom, but stands for a broader principle: that government should not intrude on our most private family matters,” he said.

The rule comes as no surprise. During the president campaign Hillary Clinton, who as secretary of state will oversee foreign aid, pledged to end the rule.

The rule change “would be huge,” California Representative Diana DeGette of Colorado told National Public Radio. “By the US restricting women’s rights to reproductive planning internationally, it really destroys their lives. Because they can’t control the size of their family, that affects their use of resources and food and child nutrition and so many other things. The way to increase the stability in Third World countries, frankly, is for sensible family planning.”

Well, well! this is heartening, I must say 🙂 If he keeps this up, we may just get back on the right (I mean LEFT) track as a Nation!

nuffsaidblack1

Ice Circle (its MOVING!) O_o

•January 28, 2009 • Leave a Comment

Ok this is just strange! I dont know where it was filmed, but the accent of the guys you hear talking sounds American to me…..

Vodpod videos no longer available.

more about “Strange Ice Circle Video by Captain B…“, posted with vodpod

LINK to more pix posted by a Norwegian group that has made a study of these thingies…
ANOTHER LINK to a page of US ice circles
ANOTHER LINK to a site with pictures from Russia
Some has said that these oddities are formed by currents moving around bends in a river, creating vortexes …but how does that explain the ones that form in ponds or lakes? There’s no moving currents to speak of in stationary bodies of water??? Well, one thing’s for sure, they are a whole lot harder for crazy madcap schoolboys to pull off than those pesky crop circles were.
nuffsaidblack1

O’Brien

•January 27, 2009 • 4 Comments

Where to start?  Ive been thru the wringer with this cat:  There was the time he almost lost an eye getting into a fight with something (it was dark and I could only HEAR the fight).  I was so worried about him…I held him and nursed him, and he made it through (Thank GAWD!).  Then there was the time two of his front teeth were pulled outward, as if they were yanked out of their sockets somehow.  That was pretty ghastly, but he came thru that ok too.  Silly cat, I guess he’s fighting Irish too (talk about self-fulfilling prophecy eh?).  Used to be, I only had boy cats.  But little by little, new cats adopted me and now I have 3 girl cats and only O’Brien left to represent the boy cats.  Girl cats are a pain.  And they SPRAY!!!  And they’re CRANKY!!  I wish I had just boy cats again, but what are ya gonna do?  O’Brien is about 12 years old now I think.  Yeah.  I just did the math.  He’ll be 13 in May.  And he’s such a goon.  He hides out in my closet. Yesterday, I went into my closet and called his name and he peeked out at me from between my Blazers.  Of course, Brendan had to get into the act too:

012609_203122

012609_20311

012609_20301

012609_20321

012609_203311

That last one is my favorite 🙂

I love you O.B.

nuffsaidblack1

Urban Dictionary: “Pathetic” (if it aint an entry, it OUGHTA BE!)

•January 24, 2009 • 2 Comments

horsemanity-page2

LINK

They treat fucking HORSE TEETH with CARE! (you suppose they treat the other end the same way???)

horses_ass21

There ya go you EQUINE EEJITS.

shitpresentblack

If any of you ever grow a frigging backbone and want to go head to head, BRING IT ON

(I wouldnt doubt it if they copied this, they aren’t capable of an original thought between them)

nuffsaidblack1


More Perpetual loopings in my headspace…

•January 23, 2009 • Leave a Comment

If I wasnt such a fan of Paul Stanley, this would start to get annoying! But I am so….I think its been 3 solid months now that Ive listened almost daily to one song or another off of his One LIVE Kiss DVD, and my favorites are below:

A MILLION TO ONE

MAGIC TOUCH

TONIGHT YOU BELONG TO ME (need to turn it up, sound is low)

Sometimes, being OCD is fun!!

nuffsaidblack1

Did ya hear the one about Obama?

•January 21, 2009 • 6 Comments

I believe I am the only person on the planet who has not seen or heard any clips of Obama’s inauguration.  We cant do any streaming content from work and I was far too busy anyway even if I wanted to…I called my daughter who said she watched the speech and her summation?  “Well, he’s still alive….”

********

Think about that for a minute.  I know several people who said basically the same thing, as if they were all expecting some crazed gunman from a grassy knoll somewhere to take aim and snuff out the President on his Inaugural day.  Rumors and angry mutterings are all over the internet, speculation is rampant that Obama is somehow wearing an invisible bullseye.  I hope his security is hyper-vigilant.  I hope he has the strongest Kevlar underwear the FBI can supply him with.  I hope he has 3 guardian angels.  I hope this man stays safe for as long as he holds office.   And thats all Im gonna say about that.

nuffsaidblack1

perpetual looping in my headspace…

•January 20, 2009 • Leave a Comment

ok, I know I cant be the only one this happens to: Have you ever had a song stuck in your head and it doesnt go away? You know, it forms a sort of background theme song for your day? Well, it happens to me all the time. Ive got a song running around in my head right now, over and over, I dont know when it started or why, but as I was getting coffee this morning, I noticed it:

Where were you, when I needed you—you could not be found…

and for some reason, every time I remember Greg Kihn, Tommy Tutone follows soon after…

Google Earth

•January 19, 2009 • Leave a Comment

Truly, there are no secrets any more, the eye in the sky has exposed, via Google Earth, some of the most amazing geographical anomalies. Take a look

This was apparently a fake, supposedly to introduce the POTC movie franchise…

and finally:

nuffsaidblack1

…and sometimes Y and W…

•January 18, 2009 • 2 Comments

when I was in grammar school, learning about vowels, I learned them like this: A,E,I,O,U, and sometimes Y, and W.

today on the phone, my mother and I were talking about the oddities of language, and we mentioned Welsh, which has no conventional vowels, and I said, “except for Y and W, and that’s probably where my childhood rhyme about vowels comes from “sometimes Y and W” and she said WHAT? I never learned that” and I said, “well, Im not making it up, thats what I learned,” and she suggested I go online and see if I could find any info one way or another. So I did a search and I found out that I am not alone, that for a [apparently brief] span of time, Y AND W were taught as vowels. What follows is a brief summary of my search results:

from an online discussion forum, I learned I wasnt the only one that was taught this:

http://www.librarything.com/topic/39850&newpost=1#lastmsg

some highlights from that link:

So the letter “w” in a word like ‘crowd’ functions like a vowel

*************

I found it interesting what the lexicographers, Samuel Johnson and Noah Webster, and the grammarian, Goold Brown, had to say about w being a vowel.

In Grammar of the English Tongue, which is prefixed to his Dictionary of the English Language, Samuel Johnson (1709-1784) wrote:
“Of w, which in diphthongs is often an undoubted vowel, some grammarians have doubted whether it ever be a consonant; and not rather as it is called a double u, or ou, as water may be resolved into ouater; but letters of the same sound are always reckoned consonants in other alphabets: and it may be observed, that w follows a vowel without any hiatus or difficulty of utterance, as frosty winter. Yet I am of opinion that both w and y are always vowels, because they cannot after a vowel be used with the sound which is supposed to make them consonants.”
Note: The last sentence is omitted in the 1785 6th edition and later editions of the Dictionary.

In his 1828 edition of his American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster (1758-1843) wrote:
“W is properly a vowel, a simple sound, formed by opening the mouth with a close circular configuration of the lips. it is precisely the ou of the French, and the u of the Spaniards, Italians and Germans. With the h vowels it forms diphthongs, which are of easy pronunciation; as in well, want, will, dwell; pronouced ooell, ooant, ooill, dooell. In English, it is always followed by another vowel, except when followed by h, as is when; but this case is an exception only in writing, and not in pronunciation, for h precedes w in utterance; when being pronounced hooen. In Welsh, w, which is sounded as in English is used without another vowel, as in fwl, a fool; dwn, dun; dwb, mortar; gwn, a gun, and a gown.

Ih his 1823 book, The First Lines of Grammar, Goold Brown (1791-1857) wrote:
“W or Y is called a consonant when it precedes a vowel heard in the same syllable, as in wine, twine, whine, ye, yet, youth; in all other cases, these letters are vowels, as in newly, dewy, eyebrow.

also on another blog, a poster mentions that he and his friends addressed this issue:

http://www.thelookmachine.com/archives/2005/10/sometimes_y_and.html

WIKI says this:

The name “vowel” is often used for the symbols that represent vowel sounds in a language’s writing system, particularly if the language uses an alphabet. In writing systems based on the Latin alphabet, the letters A, E, I, O, U, W and Y are all used to represent vowels, although not all of these letters represent vowels in all languages (some of them, especially W and Y, are also used to represent approximants); in addition, extensions of the Latin alphabet have independent vowel letters such as Ä, Ö, Ü, Å, Æ, and Ø.

The phonetic values vary by language, and some languages use I and Y for the consonant [j], e.g., initial I in Romanian and initial Y in English. In the original Latin alphabet, there was no written distinction between V and U, and the letter represented the approximant [w] and the vowels [u] and [ʊ]. In Modern Welsh, the letter W represents these same sounds. Similarly, in Creek, the letter V stands for [ə]. There is not necessarily a direct one-to-one correspondence between the vowel sounds of a language and the vowel letters. Many languages that use a form of the Latin alphabet have more vowel sounds than can be represented by the standard set of five vowel letters. In English spelling, the five letters A E I O and U can represent a variety of vowel sounds, while the letter Y frequently represents vowels (as in e.g., “gym” or “happy“); W is used in representing some diphthongs (as in “cow“) and to represent a monophthong in the borrowed words “cwm” and “crwth“.

Other languages cope with the limitation in the number of Latin vowel letters in similar ways. Many languages, like English, make extensive use of combinations of vowel letters to represent various sounds. Other languages use vowel letters with modifications, e.g., Ä in Finnish, or add diacritical marks, like umlauts, to vowels to represent the variety of possible vowel sounds. Some languages have also constructed additional vowel letters by modifying the standard Latin vowels in other ways, such as æ or ø that are found in some of the Scandinavian languages. The International Phonetic Alphabet has a set of 28 symbols to represent the range of basic vowel qualities, and a further set of diacritics to denote variations from the basic vowel.

Someone on the Librarything.com site mentioned the word “crowd” as an example of the “w” as vowel phenomenon….particularly because other “ou” sounding words have the vowel “u” instead of “w” but the “ow” sound is clearly the same as the “ou” sound (as in words like mouse, house, pound sound, and cow, pow, sow (as in female pig, not the seed planting sow) now, plow, etc) except for words like through, or thought and their rhyming counterparts (by the way, the word rhyme is a perfect example of a “y” as vowel word)

I guess the English language has borrowed so much from so many other sources that even its basic rules are in question…at least sometimes…at any rate, apparently, the “w” as vowel rule has disappeared from the classroom (as far as I know) because the only words that seem to fit the strictest definition of the “w” as vowel rule are now only found in Welsh language, and thus arent common enough to illustrate the point.

Can anyone think of any other rules that they learned in school that are no longer taught? math perhaps?

nuffsaidblack1

HELLO to the HORSEMANITY Crowd!

•January 15, 2009 • 6 Comments

Isnt it exciting boys and girls? After all these years, I am getting visits from a group that thoroughly hates me, and may I say, the feeling is eminently mutual!

I admit to being a bit nonplussed, I cant fathom a single reason why they would seek me out–out of ALL the potential targets in this drafty old ‘verse, apparently I am their FAVORITE (takes a moment to gag a bit in my mouth) Still, this constitutes an honor of sorts, in an ass-backwards sort of way…and yet, I cant help but think that their pathetic little lives have been way too tame without me to stir them up into a mob-like frenzy of bile and verbal vomit.

Even now, I am sure, these wags are busily posting links to this post and other posts, gleefully picking me apart in absentia. Secure in their protected little Horsemanity fortress, where they can pick and choose who can enter. Well, I salute your *cough* bravery. Please, feel free to visit any time you like, make fun of me all you want, and know that I am not a COWARD like each of you. MY site is open to you. MY site allows unmoderated comments. Even yours.

(edited out horsey picture, but here’s something even nicer):

shitpresentblack

fuimirishbutton

nuffsaidblack1