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The Sunday Selection, New Year Edition

It’s still a holiday weekend and the Confluence Bed & Breakfast is currently closed; but we wouldn’t want to leave you stranded in the cold.  So, there’s an extra large urn in the corner filled with steaming hot coffee (I think Rico may have added a few drops of something “special”) and here are a few  escapism links to give you a respite from the dreary state of affairs.  Enjoy!

*CNN Money has an interesting overview of some of the new decade’s promised technology, such as wireless electricity and invisible speakers. The Next Little Things

* Project Censored has compiled a list of the 25 most under-reported stories of 2009, and what to look for in 2010:

*End of the year wrap ups always included “Best of Lists,” but for the end of the decade…here is the “Ultimate End of the Decade ‘Best of’ Compilation.” Literally, every possible list you can think of is here.

and finally,

*Boston.com has an excellent photo retrospective of 2009.

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

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

Science, Technology & Health

As we age, our ability to learn and retain information is hindered. The NY Times discusses : How to Train the Aging Brain

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

You’ve heard of wait staff techniques for improving tips, but did you know the restaurant may be using psychological tools of subconscious persuasion on you to empty your wallet a bit faster? Using Menu Psychology to Entice Diners

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

Incredible strides in brain science are being made every day. They have now developed a machine that can translate thoughts into speech in real time. Simply amazing.

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

Oddz n Endz

Alright, that’s enough of the mind-numbing garbage passing for news.  What else is going on that might make you smile, chuckle, or just say WTH?

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

First up, a “true crime” story to beat all: Police hunt for bizarre supermarket butt-sniffing shopper. No, … really. If you’re brave enough, there’s even a security video as evidence.

Still intrigued? There’s more about this story HERE.

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

This one’s for myiq2xu and his “plants are living things too” rebuttal to veganism: Sorry, Vegans: Brussels Sprouts Like to Live, Too.  I confess. I’m a brussel sprouts hunter. I hunt them; I cut them down; I eat them. Well, not really, but I do buy them at Wegmans and steam them.

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

Now here’s a really odd twist on the “A man walks into a bar…” theme: Michigan Man Walks Into Diner With 5-Inch Knife in Chest, Orders Coffee

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

Everyone could use more useless facts, here is a slideshow with several more to add to your collection: World’s Most Useless Facts

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

Wow. Just wow. 5th Grade Boy Steals $10,000 From Grandparents.  But that’s not the worst of it.  This little thief was handing it out to his friends!

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

File this under interesting yet random facts that you may just say “no way” about: 20 Things that happen every minute.

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

If you’re finding current events to be overwhelmingly depressing, here are a few pounds of cute to help mitigate the blues: The 13 Cutest animals of 2009; and then there’s this: 70 cute baby animals to improve your mood.

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

Forget Sparkle Ponies, these ponies kick ass!  My Little Pony fans can now enjoy superhero versions of their favorite frilly fillies: Superhero modifications for My Little Pony.

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

One need look no further than this site to see why obesity is a problem in our country: Proof that Anything can be deep fried.

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

Over in the UK, “Whack a Banker” is threatening to eclipse “Whack a Mole” as a favorite arcade game. Not to worry, there’s an internet version for you to play at home too.

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

A whole hot mess of WTH can be found here at: Oh yeah, this is totally normal.

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

The Final Word

I’ve saved this week’s super time-waster site as the Final Word: it’s the Bad Gift Emporium where you’ll find a seemingly unending collection of bad gifts people have received – and some of them are for sale. Who wouldn’t love to receive the “Potty Putter” or the “Santa & Mrs. Claus in the tub?” Just click on the thumbnail for more information about the item. And take note of the creepy yet addictive music box playing in the background. Don’t worry about it running out, a rewind is scheduled every minute or so.

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

yet, I’m still not through…and now for the big finale!  Guess who made the list of Marvelous Moobs?

Enjoy the rest of your weekend!  And don’t forget to add the links to news you’ve come across this fine day.

SoD

New Deal 2.0, explores the socio-economic impacts on the reproductive health of women

http://www.newdeal20.org/?p=7146

The United States has the highest unintended pregnancy rates in the developed world, and it is highest for the poorest segments of the population. Over time, this class-based disparity has only gotten worse. The Guttmacher Institute reports that while between 1994 and 2001 unintended pregnancies fell 20% for higher socioeconomic women, they rose 29% among women living below the poverty level. Since 2002, contraceptive use has declined, with low-income women of color leading the way. In 2006, teen pregnancies rose for the first time since 1991, and the racial group with the largest increase was African-American teens. The economic downturn is propelling a further switch away from more effective (and expensive) contraceptives. The only thing preventing a larger increase in unwanted births is abortion.

CNN Money has an interesting overview of some of the new decades promised technology, such as wireless electricity and invisible speakers.  The Next Little Things

http://finance.yahoo.com/career-work/article/108344/next-little-thing-2010?mod=career-leadership

White House Adviser Briefed in October on Underwear Bomb Technique

http://blog.newsweek.com/blogs/declassified/archive/2010/01/02/white-house-advisor-briefed-in-october-on-underwear-bomb-technique.aspx

Newsweek

By Michael Isikoff and Mark Hosenball

White House counterterrorism adviser John Brennan was briefed in October on an assassination attempt by Al Qaeda that investigators now believe used the same underwear bombing technique as the Nigerian suspect who tried to blow up Northwest Airlines Flight 253 on Christmas Day, U.S. intelligence and administration officials tell NEWSWEEK.

The briefing to Brennan was delivered at the White House by Muhammad bin Nayef, Saudi Arabia’s chief counterterrorism official. In late August, Nayef had survived an assassination attempt by an operative dispatched by the Yemeni branch of Al Qaeda who was pretending to turn himself in. The operative had tried to kill the Saudi prince by detonating a bomb on his body, but stumbled on his way into the prince’s palace and blew himself up.

Ben Nelson to Henry McMaster: ‘Call off the dogs’


http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0110/31100.html

Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.) reached out Thursday evening to South Carolina GOP Attorney General Henry McMaster, the leader of a group of 13 Republican state attorneys general who are threatening to file suit against the Senate health care bill, and urged him to forgo any legal action, POLITICO has learned.

According to a copy of a memo sent by McMaster’s chief of staff to other GOP state attorneys general detailing the call, Nelson asked McMaster to “call off the dogs,” a reference to recent threats by the state AGs to file a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of a Medicaid provision in the bill that benefits Nebraska at the expense of other states.

More and more Americans are finding themselves with no source of income other than food stamps:

Living on Nothing but Food Stamps

CAPE CORAL, Fla. — After an improbable rise from the Bronx projects to a job selling Gulf Coast homes, Isabel Bermudez lost it all to an epic housing bust — the six-figure income, the house with the pool and the investment property.

Living on Nothing but Food Stamps

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/03/us/03foodstamps.html?hp

With millions of jobs lost and major industries on the ropes, America’s array of government aid — including unemployment insurance, food stamps and cash welfare — is being tested as never before. This series examines how the safety net is holding up under the worst economic crisis in  decades.

Now, as she papers the county with résumés and girds herself for rejection, she is supporting two daughters on an income that inspires a double take: zero dollars in monthly cash and a few hundred dollars in food stamps.

With food-stamp use at a record high and surging by the day, Ms. Bermudez belongs to an overlooked subgroup that is growing especially fast: recipients with no cash income.

As we age, our ability to learn and retain information is hindered.  The NY Times discusses : How to Train the Aging Brain

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/03/education/edlife/03adult-t.html?em

“The brain is plastic and continues to change, not in getting bigger but allowing for greater complexity and deeper understanding,” says Kathleen Taylor, a professor at St. Mary’s College of California, who has studied ways to teach adults effectively. “As adults we may not always learn quite as fast, but we are set up for this next developmental step.”

Educators say that, for adults, one way to nudge neurons in the right direction is to challenge the very assumptions they have worked so hard to accumulate while young. With a brain already full of well-connected pathways, adult learners should “jiggle their synapses a bit” by confronting thoughts that are contrary to their own, says Dr. Taylor, who is 66.

Will more pols flip to the other side of the aisle? Carl Hulse of the NYT looks at the: Risks of Switching Parties

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/03/us/politics/03cong.html?hpw

If they are able to bag another Democrat or two, Republicans could claim a sense of momentum as they enter 2010, a welcome shift for them after losing the last two special House elections. And they have made some interesting overtures, with Senator John McCain of Arizona reaching out to Representative Christopher Carney of Pennsylvania, a Democrat and fellow naval officer, to ask him to consider a change.

But party-switching is a delicate and typically secretive process, and the first move usually has to come from the switcher. Republicans risk losing potential conquests if they get too aggressive and public. And despite obvious unrest among more-conservative Democrats about the difficult environment lying ahead in the midterm elections, only the most optimistic Republicans anticipate a wave of defections.

Healthcare news

Opponents of a health insurance mandate mobilize

Both healthcare proposals approved by Congress require that all Americans get health insurance. That’s now under fire from liberals, Republicans and even some in the insurance industry.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nation-and-world/la-na-health-mandate2-2010jan02,0,5314304.story

Government insurance for long-term care likely to slip into final healthcare bill

http://www.latimes.com/news/nation-and-world/la-na-health-longterm31-2009dec31,0,4138098.story

The plan would let any employee pay into the program and later receive benefits for in-home assistance to the elderly and disabled. The proposal has drawn majority opposition but little attention.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/01/01/AR2010010101837.html

Senate health-care bill would still leave millions uninsured

Even as Democrats seek the biggest expansion of health coverage in decades, as many as 23 million people could still be without insurance by 2018, illustrating the complexity of achieving the long-held Democratic goal of universal health care.

Ron Paul’s ideas, once considered fringe, are gaining in popularity amidst increasing sentiment about distaste for the current political environment.  Ron Paul’s ideas no longer fringe

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-ron-paul2-2010jan02,0,6923745.story

With the economy still struggling, the lawmaker’s libertarian views are getting serious attention.

Oddz n Endz

Police hunt for bizarre supermarket butt-sniffing shopper.  No, … really.  If you’re brave enough, there’s even a security video as evidence.

http://www.asylum.com/2009/12/22/police-hunt-bizarre-supermarket-butt-sniffing-shopper/

Plymouth, England, police are searching for the bespectacled pervert, aged about 40, who smelled the co-op worker’s bum at least 20 times on consecutive weekends.

Still intrigued?  There’s more about this story HERE. http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/2779253/Hunt-for-shop-nut-who-smelled-staff-members-bum.html

This one’s for myiq2xu and his “plants are living things too” rebuttal to veganism: Sorry, Vegans: Brussels Sprouts Like to Live, Too

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/22/science/22angi.html?_r=2&partner=rss&emc=rss

I admit it; I’m a brussel sprouts hunter.  I hunt them; I cut them down; I eat them.  Well, not really, but I do buy them at Wegmans and steam them.

Project Censored has compiled a list of the 25 most under-reported stories of 2009, and what to look for in 2010: http://www.projectcensored.org/top-stories/category/two-thousand-and-ten-book/

Now here’s a serious twist on the “A man walks into a bar…” theme: Michigan Man Walks Into Diner With 5-Inch Knife in Chest, Orders Coffee

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,580964,00.html?test=latestnews

WARREN, Mich.  —  A man who walked into a Michigan diner with a 5-inch knife stuck in his chest ordered a coffee and complained only about the cold weather.

The 52-year-old man, who has not been identified, called a 911 operatorhttp://images.intellitxt.com/ast/adTypes/2_bing.gif in Warren on Sunday night to ask that an ambulance be sent to Bray’s, an eatery in neighboring Hazel Park.

He said he had been stabbed during an attempted robbery half a mile away, then walked to the restaurant and called 911 from a pay phonehttp://images.intellitxt.com/ast/adTypes/2_bing.gif.

Everyone could use more useless facts, here is a slideshow with several more to add to your collection: World’s Most Useless Facts

http://wcbstv.com/slideshows/bizarre.facts.20.1164266.html

Wow.  Just wow.  5th Grade Boy Steals $10,000 From Grandparents

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,580961,00.html?loomia_ow=t0:s0:a16:g2:r1:c0.312240:b29496790:z10

SELMA, Ind. —  Police say a fifth-grader handed out about $300 to others on the bus ride to his eastern Indiana school. Problem is, they say, the cash was among some $10,000 he took from his grandparents’ safe.

Delaware County Sheriff George Sheridan says the boy was riding the bus to Selma Elementary School when he handed out the money on Friday, the last school day before Christmashttp://images.intellitxt.com/ast/adTypes/2_bing.gif vacation began.

File this under interesting yet random facts that you may just say “no way” about: 20 Things that happen every minute.

http://www.i-am-bored.com/bored_link.cfm?link_id=45981

You’ve heard of wait staff techniques for improving tips, but did you know the restaurant may be using psychological tools of subconscious persuasion on you to empty your wallet a bit faster?  Using Menu Psychology to Entice Diners

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/23/dining/23menus.html?_r=1

The use of menu engineers and consultants is exploding in the casual dining arena and among national chains, a sector of the business that has been especially pinched by the economy. In response, they are tapping into a growing body of research into the science of menu pricing and writing, hoping the way to a diner’s heart is not only through the stomach, but through the unconscious.

If you’re finding current events to be overwhelmingly depressing, here are a few pounds of cute to help mitigate the blues:

The 13 cutest animals of 2009  http://videogum.com/archives/the_ultimate_argument_settler/the_13_cutest_animals_of_2009_106701.html

and 70 cute baby animals to improve your mood  http://thedesigninspiration.com/articles/70-cutie-baby-animals-bring-your-a-good-mood/

For all of our moob-lovers, I present you with : Marvelous Moobs.  Guess who made the list?  http://www.marvelousmanboobs.com/

My Little Pony fans can now enjoy superhero versions of their favorite frilly fillies: Superhero modifications for My Little Pony.

http://www.comicsalliance.com/2009/09/14/the-21-awesomest-superhero-mods-for-my-little-pony/

Over in the UK, “Whack a Banker”  http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/suffolk/8410453.stm

is quickly eclipsing “Whack a Mole” as a favorite arcade game.  Not to worry, there’s an internet version for you to play at home too. http://www.funnygames.co.uk/whack-a-banker.htm

A whole hot mess of WTF can be found here at:  Oh yeah, this is totally normal. http://shechive.com/2009/11/17/oh-yeah-this-is-totally-normal/

End of the year wrap ups always included “Best of Lists,” but for the end of the decade…here is the “Ultimate End of the Decade ‘Best of’ Compilation.”  Literally, every possible list you can think of is here.

http://www.brobible.com/Story/79924

Boston.com has an excellent photo retrospective of 2009.  Part 1  http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2009/12/2009_in_photos_part_1_of_3.html

Part 2

http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2009/12/2009_in_photos_part_2_of_3.html

Part 3

http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2009/12/2009_in_photos_part_3_of_3.html

One need look no further than this site to see why obesity is a problem in our country: Proof that Anything can be deep fried.  http://topcultured.com/proof-that-anything-can-be-deep-fried/

Incredible strides in brain science are being made every day.  They have now developed a machine that can translate thoughts into speech in real time.  Simply amazing.  http://www.physorg.com/news180620740.html

Super time-waster site of the week.  Bad Gift Emporium.  A seemingly unending collection of bad gifts people have received – and some of them are for sale.  Who wouldn’t love to receive the “Potty Putter” or the “Santa & Mrs. Claus in the tub?”  Just click on the thumbnail for more information about the item.  And take note of the creepy yet addictive music box playing in the background.  Don’t worry about it running out, a rewind is scheduled every minute or so.

http://www.badgiftemporium.com/

88 Responses

  1. WARREN, Mich. — A man who walked into a Michigan diner with a 5-inch knife stuck in his chest ordered a coffee and complained only about the cold weather.
    now thats really a bad case of heartburn

  2. Some of the Blogstalkers are from England, and they certainly are butt-sniffers.

    Coincidence?

    • England has many ex-patriots living there. Lots of Middle Easterners go there to college.

  3. Your “big finale” almost brought up my big breakfast. The picture of the guy with the big hairy moobs should be illegal.

  4. myiq2xu, i don’t know about the ones from England. but the average domestic O-sheep variety are definitely ASS WIPES .

  5. Hey you guys (boogieman7167 and myiq)! Your humor doesn’t miss a beat even in these early hours.

    SoD, nice round-up. I was feeling better just reading your post and then the above got me chuckling.

    I guess laughter is the best answer to a pretty sorry state of political affairs.

  6. I wonder whether they can achieve bi-partisanship here? 🙄

    Congress Considers Hitting Mute On Loud TV Ads

    Anyone who watches TV can tell you: When the commercials come on, it feels like you’re being blasted by volume. At some point, we’ve all reached for the mute button, because those ads are so much louder than the shows surrounding them.

    But do TV commercials really have to be louder than the TV programs? That’s what Congress is deciding right now.

    • Remember Mars Attacks! when the Martians blow up congress and the granny starts laughing in glee.
      I totally understand that granny.

    • so glad to hear they are getting their priorities straight.
      I feel soooo represented.

    • LOL. Americans should hit the mute on their Congress Critters.

    • It’s so nice to know congress is taking care of us on these little irritations of daily life. Wonder how they will screw it up and how many pages the bill will be.

    • There’s already a law on that in Italy, but the more desperate a TV channel is the higher the vol on ads.

  7. Going over your links: something tells me Isikoff’s story is one of those “web only” deals – he used to do that when he was occasionally reporting the truth on W – never made into the print edition.
    Weather more pols switch parties or it’s those retirements, or Obama leaving all the bad rap for his action/inaction on Congress – perspectives for 2010 are not good. I don’t expect Democrats to vote GOP – hell, I wouldn’t do that even. But staying home, voting third party will happen a lot. Which will be karmic in view of Obama’s campaign flyer about BillClinton losing seats for the Dems. At least it will not be ‘unprecedented”

    • 2006 and 2008 were anti-Bush elections. The Democrats could have used the massive failure of movement conservatism to swing the political mood of the country back to the left but they didn’t. Instead they moved the Democratic party to the right. 2008 wasn’t about ideas and values, it was about the One-derfulness of Obama.

      Many of the Democratic gains in 2006 and 2008 were in states or districts that lean right. Even if those seats stay in the hands of the D’s they will be held by blue-dogs.

      IOW – we’re pretty much fucked either way.

    • Or historical/hysterical.

  8. WTF?:

    Police officers from two Chicago suburbs are being sued after one of them allegedly Tasered a man having a diabetic seizure because the diabetic involuntarily hit the officer while being taken to an ambulance.

    Prospero Lassi, a 40-year-old employee of Southwest Airlines, filed the lawsuit (PDF) with a federal court in Chicago last week, following an April 9, 2009, incident in which Lassi was taken to hospital following a violent diabetic seizure — and being Tasered 11 times while unconscious.

    That day, Lassi’s roommate found the man on the floor of his apartment having a seizure and foaming at the mouth, according to the statement filed with the court. The roommate called 911 for help, and police officers from the Brookfield and LaGrange Park police departments arrived to help with the situation.

    As police officers were helping the paramedics move Lassi to an ambulance, Lassi — still in the midst of the seizure and described as “unresponsive” — involuntarily smacked one of the officers with his arm.

    “Reacting to Mr. Lassi’s involuntary movement, one or more of the [officers] pushed Mr. Lassi to the ground, forcibly restraining him there,” the complaint states. “[LaGrange Park Officer Darren] Pedota then withdrew his Taser, an electroshock weapon that uses electrical current to disrupt a person’s control over his muscles, and electrocuted Mr. Lassi eleven times.

    That’s shocking.

  9. Kill the messenger!:

    Low favorables: Dems rip Rasmussen

    Every poll out there shows the approval ratings of Obama and the Democratic Congress in free fall. Rasmussen just shows them lower than the others.

    • I think Rasmussen’s polling model probably does give a little more weight to Repub/independent opinion and likely to vote but trends are trends. Shooting the messenger is somewhere on the trend line for desperation.

      • The only opinion polls that really matter are elections. In 1991 GHWB was sky-high in the polls. In 1992 he lost the election.

  10. RD, a mention of you in John’s (LR) post–“We knew he was a fraud…”

  11. From the science wing of TC:

    Neil DeGrasse Tyson on PBS’ Newshour said: “…[Scientific leadership] drives the economic strength and security of nations. The fall is not from a cliff. More like a slow, downward slide — almost imperceptible from day to day. But as the years pass America will have descended from leaders to players to merely followers as we fade to insignificance, at best hitching a ride on the innovations of others.”

    http://www.pbs.org/newshour/updates/science/july-dec09/yearinscience_12-31.html

  12. I finded this at Cannonfire:

  13. SoD,

    On the 70 cute baby animals link, all I get is a blank page on some ancestry site.

  14. Just when you think the misogynist frat boiz of Left Blogistan can’t sink any lower, along comes Thers to prove you wrong.

    http://www.eschatonblog.com/2010/01/late-night_03.html

  15. Truth Emergency

    The Oligarchy and the MSM won’t report the truth. Pretty obvious isn’t it?

    In the United States today, the rift between reality and reporting has peaked. There is no longer a mere credibility gap, but rather a literal Truth Emergency in which the most important information affecting people is concealed from view.

  16. These were NOT the winning numbers for last night’s Super Lotto:

    03 10 23 26 30 mega-24

    • “I figure you have the same chance of winning the lottery whether you play or not. ” — Fran Lebowitz

      And while I’m at it, another gem by her:
      “My favorite animal is steak.” — Fran Lebowitz

    • I must admit I never buy it because I can’t be bothered to look for the numbers, but if say a Klown posted them on the side, hemmm.

  17. The latest issue of The Economist has a focus on women in the work place.

    Women’s economic empowerment is arguably the biggest social change of our times. Just a generation ago, women were largely confined to repetitive, menial jobs. They were routinely subjected to casual sexism and were expected to abandon their careers when they married and had children. Today they are running some of the organisations that once treated them as second-class citizens. Millions of women have been given more control over their own lives. And millions of brains have been put to more productive use. Societies that try to resist this trend—most notably the Arab countries, but also Japan and some southern European countries—will pay a heavy price in the form of wasted talent and frustrated citizens.

    http://www.economist.com/printedition/displayStory.cfm?Story_ID=15174489

  18. Real Estate in Cape Coral, Fla., Is Far From a Recovery But I keep hearing the recession is over?

    FELLOW adventurers, refugees from winter and armchair archaeologists, we are here on this shiny green tour bus to embark on a safari of sorts. We’ll be exploring the local habitat, as upended and reconfigured by an epochal real estate fiasco.

    Our guide, Marc Joseph, stalks wildlife of the white-elephant variety. A real estate agent, he specializes in houses that proved financially disastrous for someone — the banker, the homeowner, the American taxpayer, often all three. Mr. Joseph’s bus is emblazoned with red letters spelling the name of this thrill ride: ForeclosureToursRUs.com.

    As we navigate this speculator’s paradise turned financial wasteland, Mr. Joseph stands at the front of the bus in a green polo shirt, highlighting specimens like this one: a white stucco house fronted by palm trees and topped by a Spanish tile roof on a canal emptying into the Gulf of Mexico. It last sold in 2005 for $850,000. Yours today for $273,000.

    • I wonder how many people out there are trapped in homes that are worth a lot less than they owe? They can afford the payments (for now) but they can’t sell unless the market rebounds to bubble-level values.

      • I’m betting it’s 100s of thousands or maybe millions depending on how they financed and where they live. If unemployment gets worse, and I’m afraid it might, we may learn.

    • Other side of the coin sort of. The middle class can’t win for losing, but money will out.

      Cash-rich real estate investors trigger bidding wars, frustrate other buyers

      Investors have reemerged with brute force in the Washington region’s real estate market over the past few months, triggering bidding wars in some neighborhoods teeming with foreclosed properties and hindering traditional home buyers such as Melissa Diggins.

      Diggins and her fiance, George Mills, made a dozen offers on houses in Prince William County but lost more than half of them to investors making all-cash offers.

      Frustrated, they gave up their search for a new home, convinced that they could not compete.

  19. Of those photos, part three – #39 tell it all – more than some commenters get it
    http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2009/12/2009_in_photos_part_3_of_3.html#photo39

    • I loved photo 24-so nice to see parents not having to spend a wad just to accompany their kids to university. 😉

  20. Here’s a list (h/t Juan Cole) from the Nation on the MVPS of 2009 … considered most valuable progressives in culture/politics. Maria Cantwell, Peter De Fazio and Elizabeth Warren are at the top of the list.

    http://www.thenation.com/doc/20100111/nichols

    • Cantwell, DeFazio, and Warren should be at the head of that list. Cantwell doesn’t seem to make progressives happy but that’s OK by me. She’s certainly not doctrinaire.

      • Cantwell is one of my state senators. I’ve been very unimpressed with her on numerous issues. She’s got another 3 years before she has to run again, so she can turn that around.

        I sent her a letter once telling her that I firmly believed that the credit reporting agencies had an obligation to make sure the information they had on people was accurate considering how much those ratings cost people in interest rates, insurance premiums, where they can live, and work. Her response was an excuse for why they have to use extraordinary measures to collect debt. It is a pattern with her to just send out the “close enough” responses to my questions.

    • Yes. Pete DeFazio!

  21. Okay I don’t like Ann Coulter but THIS is disgusting

    http://www.eschatonblog.com/2010/01/late-night_03.html

  22. SOD, please email me! I have been trying to contact you with a question… Thank you!

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