Firefox 3 rocks the web

8月 18th, 2008

Firefox 3Upgrading your web browser should be a cause for celebration, this time around.

Firefox 3 comes with around 14,000 fixes, adjustments and upgrades but if you’re moving up from Firefox 2, you’ll enjoy a very smooth transition and here’s a quick overview of what’s in store for you with this amazing new upgrade.

  • Password Manager - Remember site passwords without ever seeing a pop-up.
  • One-Click Bookmarking - Bookmark, search and organize Web sites quickly and easily.
  • Improved Performance - View Web pages faster, using less of your computer’s memory.
  • Smart Location Bar - Find the sites you love in seconds—enter a term for instant matches that make sense.
  • Instant Web Site ID - Avoid online scams, unsafe transactions and forgeries with simple site identity.
  • Full Zoom - See any part of a Web page, up close and readable, in seconds.
  • Platform-Native Look & Feel - Browse with a Firefox that’s integrated into your computer’s operating system.

Even if that’s already worthy of a primary digit upgrade, 3, in this case, there’s more.

Consider the very web 2.0-like ability to add tags to bookmarks, just like in blogs and wikis. This means that above and beyond the usual bookmark categories you create and manage, the tags can add a significant level of precision regarding the content available in your bookmarked pages.

Oh! And you can bookmark links with one click by clicking on the little blue star nested in the smart location bar that’ll make you navigation easier than ever by suggesting web sites you may want to visit, as you type the name in the location field, live.

Furthermore, Firefox 3 protects you from viruses, worms, trojan horses and spyware. Not bad for a browser — Microsoft should take notes! Attack sites will have a much harder time defrauding ususpecting web users now that Firefox 3 integrates these anti-malware features. In other words, in your clueless aunt Mimi still finds herself being the victim of fraudsters, go to her place and install Firefox 3 on her machine so her misery will stop, once and for all.

There would be many more features to review and talk about but the real story with Firefox 3 is how much more advanced it is, compared to the current market leader, Internet Explorer 6. Even if Microsoft acts tough and maintain that their browser is still number one, the online crowd can move quickly and the place they would like go is deep into Mozilla territory, thanks to Firefox 3.

To this day, 19,882,507 web users have downloaded Firefox 3 and that number is going up, all the time.

Tags: firefox 3, mozilla, web browser, web page navigation, ie6, microsoft, open source, free software, anti-malware, best browser

Kathy Griffin: My Life On The D-List (recap)

8月 18th, 2008

By Tom Rose
Fancast.com

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Last night was the Finale on Kathy Griffin: My Life On The D-List and I was very close to tears. Not because I’m gonna miss the show, which I will, but because of the subject matter Kathy chose to close out Season 4: a visit to the Walter Reed rehab center for wounded combat vets.

There’s a saying that any publicity is good publicity, and Kathy certainly has subscribed to the notion. It’s calculated. And I have seen plenty of footage with celebs among the troops that have felt like a staged photo op. But last night Kathy put all that aside and showed her vulnerable, compassionate heart with sincere regard, respect and love for the men and women who have literally given a piece of themselves to preserve the freedoms that Kathy and all of us enjoy.
Being a Vet myself has a little bit to do with how deeply the episode stirred me. I didn’t escape unscathed from my tour, at least emotionally, and I’ve served alongside some who did not make it back wholly intact. And a few who never made it home at all. But even the most hardened ant-military activist would have to agree that caring for those who have sacrificed a normal future has to be the very least we can give back. And Kathy gives.

In a departure from her usual format, the entire episode relates to her visit to Walter Reed and the stand-up act she performs at the end of the day. No side plots and no celeb bashing. Just Kathy and the Troops. That’s not to say it wasn’t funny. Kathy can’t help her nature. But the best jokes were laid on by the troops themselves.

Before the trip, KG does some research, which is fascinating to observe. She dials up the people who can give her the best insights for the gig on that K-Mart cordless speaker phone, which she has a strange way of holding. Is she afraid of headsets? After getting a list of do’s and don’ts from LT. Colonel Todd, the liaison for the event (which she quickly discards) she calls Joan Rivers for some advice.

As soon as I heard that raspy voice over the tinny speaker I perked up. Here’s a lady who knows a thing or two about controversial humor and she gives as good as she gets. “Don’t bash Bush, bond with the male nurses and gay guys and don’t forget: hairy Iraqi women jokes kill every time if you’re stuck.”

At the rehab center Kathy has an inkling of what she’s about to experience. She’s been to Iraq and Afghanistan on USO tours. But she’s quickly overwhelmed by the mostly courageous attitudes of the wounded and their loved ones. There’s even a dark side of the tragedy that is compelling to her, and despite the list of no-no’s, she decides to do her act as a sign of solidarity. Nothing held back.

She smiles and chats playfully with the strapping Sergeant King on the Bowflex who is really grateful that his leg was blown off below the knee and not above. Or the smiling Corporal who is dazzled by his high tech pair of Lt. Dan’s Magic Legs. How about the wives and mothers who are allowed to share the recovery alongside the soldiers in what amounts to a 4 Star hotel for amputees? The bravery and good cheer at the gratitude that these boys made it back alive is very evident, and when Kathy goes to prep for her act, she breaks down in tears when she’s finally out of sight.

As she goes over her notes before the show, she basically throws everything out and decides to make the residents the whole story. Well not everything. She’s brought along Emmy in case the kids want a picture with her. Who wouldn’t? She focuses on Nick, the boy with the see-thru prosthetic (which he sometimes uses as a beer keg). He’s got a tattoo across his chest which reads “F*ck Me I’m Irish.” Kathy’s Irish too! Good thing she had all the girls wear push up bras. Nick perks up for the first time in months as Kathy shamelessly flirts with him.

The act starts a bit rocky, but KG wins the hearts and minds when they see where she’s going. Let’s get this heartache out in the open, so we can deal with the rest of our lives. It works. She’s got them in the palm of her hands by the end. But this is the Army, so when the act is over she is pulled over by one of the Chaplains in attendance who playfully orders her to drop and give him 20 for every profanity uttered. Not even Sgt. King would be able to pull that off, she’d have to be an Olympic Athlete.

As the troops and families file out with their picture of Kathy and Emmy, there’s a bit of misty-eyed reality. There’s no way to truly replace what has been lost, but the attempt is valiant. As the episode closes we get a flashback over the season arc and revisit the best moments, if only fleetingly. It’s been a great run and like we said in the beginning: Kathy’s moved up off the D-List.

Her closing words struck deep. Confirming that the show will go on she says: “If you want to learn more about my life, you’ll just have to wait and see.” Semper Fi, Kathy. We’ll be waiting.

Audrina Patrige: Un-Reality TV Star!

8月 18th, 2008

Ann M. Murray
Fancast.com
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Lauren Conrad dipped her toe into the non-reality TV realm when she announced she will be guest starring on the show Greek as…herself! Looks like her partner-in-crime, Audrina Patridge will be taping a guest appearance on the new Fox show, Do Not Disturb starring Niecy Nash and Jerry O’Connell. Audrina shows in her blog that she is exuberant, saying “I will be playing a guest checking into the hotel and I am going to film my scenes sometime next week! I think Jerry O’Connell is hysterical (have you guys seen his video on that website Funny or Die?) and I can’t wait to meet Niecy [Nash]!” But…what if Jerry wasn’t as hysterical? Would Audrina be as excited???


Watch Audrina get ready for her close-up on The Hills, at Fancast.

Check out the scoop about the new show Do Not Disturb on Fancast’s Fall TV Preview.

Sunday Reading - the Serious Stuff

8月 18th, 2008

A great review of Congressman Wexler’s new book “Fire Breathing Liberal” at Daily Kos serves up some great tidbits from the book:

First, on a childhood with which any political geek can identify:

Norman and I would play a game titled Mr. President. Other kids were playing All-Star Baseball or Electric Football. We played Mr. President for hours at a time, five days a week. I grew up believing this was the most phenomenal game ever devised, which in many ways describes me. The object of the game was to win the presidential election. How many nine-year-olds knew that New York State had 43 electoral votes? Norman and I did. That fact might well sum up my childhood.

On the disgusting cowardice of fellow Democrats who actually voted for a resolution condemning an ad by moveon.org:

Many Democrats voted for the resolution [against MoveOn] to distance themselves from MoveOn and the substance of the newspaper advertisement. Just imagine the furor that would have resulted had we proposed a resolution to censure the right-wing Christian Coalition or Pat Robertson for one of their more outrageous proclamations, such as blaming 9/11 on homsexuals. I voted against the resolution, but unfortunately many of my colleagues did not, and it passed. It was not our proudest day.

On his outrage over the Supreme Court selection of George Bush as pResident:

Every politician learns how to lose as well as win–and as a Democrat I had a lot of practice losing. Through most of my career I’d tried to salvage what was possible, stand up for my constituents, and use the influence I had as a member of Congress in areas where partisanship played less of a role, such as foreign relations and constituent services, where I could do some good. But this Supreme Court ruling infuriated me. I was just outraged by it. Like many of my constituents, I feel it is a wound that will never completely heal.

And on why impeachment of George Bush is still a good idea:

Certainly there were legitimate arguments made against these proceedings. Many people reasoned that we’d been through this gut-wrenching process with President Clinton and it had ripped apart the nation. I responded by suggesting that the worst possible legacy of the Clinton impeachment would be to discourage future Congresses from examining valid allegations of constitutional violations against members of the executive branch. Should that happen, the tragedy of Clinton’s impeachment would be compounded.

I have to get this book (which is $30 for the hardback right now). I just checked and my library doesn’t have it - although they DO have eleven titles by Bill O’Reilly. Geez.

A great diary on International Day of the World’s Indigenous People, which is today.

While doing research for another story, I came across this film clip that every American should watch to see how our government today treats Americans. The film involves some of the Western Shoshone, who for years have been fighting our federal government’s seizure of livestock and land for gold mining, water and nuclear testing at the Nevada Test Site, which is located within the treaty-recognized territory of Western Shoshone lands. There are 60 million acres of Western Shoshone lands located in Nevada, Idaho, Utah and California. The federal government claims 90% of the lands as public or federally-controlled lands, which are then privatized for corporate raping of our environment and degradation of spiritual lands. Greedy profiteering corporations then swoop in to stake mining claims in the “third largest gold producing area in the world.”

The federal government has been doing the dirty work of corporations by assaulting people, seizing livestock, and privatizing ancestral lands for the sake of mining companies. Years ago, President Truman tried to seize the steel industry but the US Supreme Court held that was unconstitutional. Today, government seizure is permissible when done to enable, for example, mining in Mount Tenabo or storing nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain.

The diary refers to this film:

The film shows an armed, brazen cavalcade raid of agents in helicopters and jeep/semi truck caravans in the dark of night and in the daylight seizing the Danns’ horses, wild horses and their cattle to enable corporate gold mines which are spreading through Western Shoshone sacred lands. It also shows the dead horses caused by the government’s rush to roundup without listening to warnings that the cold and low food at this time of year would kill the horses. So, horses died on the range. And, horses boarded by BLM died of starvation. All so the government could privatize their range for gold mining. We hear about foreign governments seizing private land by force and raise our voices. But, the silence in America when our government does the same is almost deafening.

The federal government claimed that they lost their lands by gradual encroachment. After the US signed the treaty, it then obtained de facto “title” to the lands not by law, but by simply “treating” the land as federal land. When the Danns’ case reached the US Supreme Court, the court did not even address how this title had been transferred from the Danns to the US because the Secretary of the Interior had accepted the money award on their behalf. The court concluded that the Danns had been paid, which took away their right to argue before the court that they had title to these lands. Thus, a shuffle of money between two federal agencies constituted the “sale” of the Shoshone land to the government.

Next, an interesting diary about what racism does to white people. I disagree with the author’s claim that racism may be most damaging to whites, but I am 100% in agreement on the rest:

Bell notes in Silent Covenants, his recently published analysis of the context and consequences of the famous civil rights case, Brown vs the Board of Education, that “from the nation’s beginnings, policymakers have been willing to sacrifice even blacks’ basic entitlements of freedom and justice as a kind of political catalyst that enables whites to reach compromises that resolve differing and potentially damaging economic and political differences.” In fact, “policymakers recognize and act to remedy racial injustices when, and only when, they perceive that such action will benefit the nation’s interests without significantly diminishing whites’ sense of entitlement.” Landmark twentieth century works as Gunnar Myrdal’s An American Dilemma, Lawrence Goodwyn’s The Populist Moment, C. Van Woodward’s The Strange Career of Jim Crow, and David Roediger’ 2005 study, Working Toward Whiteness, support this argument.

Simply stated, it would appear that white people have been offered supremacy among peasants in exchange for their passivity….

As it turns out, racism may be even more psychologically damaging for the social class that “enjoys” its benefits, than for the class victimized by it. Fromm and his colleagues argued that authoritarianism, the soil of racism, makes dominant white culture in the United States an easy pawn of fascism. Post Modernists such as Michel Foucault and Jacque Derrida fully agree. They perceive a citizenry rendered passive and ineffectual, incapable of effectively interacting with much less restraining a power elite grown less democratic and more corrupt in direct proportion to its immunity from real criticism. Jurgen Habermas, the least pessimistic of the Frankfurt School scholars, finds the situation to be less hopeless. With resolve and proper knowledge, people may be able to free themselves of debilitating mind-sets and beliefs systematically inculcated by the powerful, exactly as predicted by Antonio Gramsci more than a century ago.

A new blog called Inside Orwell has just begun that will reproduce, one entry per day and on the same days of the year as the originals, the diaries of George Orwell. It will be interesting to follow. War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength.

A diary at Daily Kos on rape in the military illustrates what some of us already knew - that at dudely liberal places like Kos, the liberal dudes are still mostly typical dudes and they just don’t get it, which is why I rarely read sites like Kos anymore. Of course 1 in 3 military women experience sexual assault. At Kos, a few male former soldiers deny the statistic, but I’ve never heard of a former female servicemember denying the figures. Why? Any woman who has ever actually spent time on a military base knows exactly why - the entire culture of misogyny, an entire ethic of warfare based on the “otherness” of woman. When I lived at a base overseas, there were lots of sexual assaults that were covered up (which I routinely heard about through a close friend whose husband worked at the command post). There was woman-hating behavior that was constant and crazy - strippers at every birthday, retirement, or promotion party; adultery by most of the married men I knew; crowds of British women sent to the base nightclub on buses every Saturday night (this club was once named by Playboy magazine “once of the top ten best pickup spots for American men worldwide”). And, of course, the entire carnival of misogyny was fueled by an endless supply of cheap booze. As I have often said, my mother raised me to be a liberal feminist, but it took four years on a military base overseas to make me a radical feminist.

Next, a very nice diary on the U.U. church shootings in Tennessee. I am a Unitarian Universalist and my daughter’s naming ceremony was in a U.U. church. Unfortunately, when I heard, with the television on in the background while I was doing somthing else, that a man had shot in a church and had wanted to “kill liberals,” my first guess was that we U.U.s were the target. It isn’t the first time. It, unfortunately, won’t be the last. The following refers to the Sunday service the week after the shooting:

In the homily, Buice laid a minister’s stole, a strip of cloth showing the Celtic cross’ motif of violence combined with the symbol of hope, the rising sun, across the ministerial pulpit and “gave” it to the congregation, to “a good church,” as it had been given to him by the daughter of a Presbyterian minister, “a good man.” He thundered, “Today, we are all Presbyterians. We are all Jews. We are all Muslims. We are all liberals. We are all conservatives!” If there is one hallmark of Unitarian Universalism, it is the thoughtful response to problems of great complexity. Buice’s statements cut to the quick of divisiveness, hatred, and bigotry. The congregation roared back in approbation.

The ministers past and present then moved to the back of the church, where the shooter had come in and begun to fulfill his self-appointed mission to kill liberals until he was killed by the police (he reckoned, in error, that people who work for peace are too weak for war, so he never anticipated that he would be brought down almost instantly by brave members of the church who did not hesitate). Standing in the same spot, the ministers reclaimed the space for peace, for justice, for love, and for strength….

The tone of the service was one of bravery, of defiance, of the conscious choice of thinking people to choose peace, and of the importance of community. The shooter may have taken two lives, but he left without taking the spirit of the church, which, as was printed on hundreds of t-shirts sitting out in the fellowship hall for distribution, is “love.”

I was reminded by the UUs that it takes the strongest kind of people to love by choice, instead of hating by default or in desperation.

It was pretty magnificent, all in all.

Finally, a very good - and quite long (although it gets better and better as it goes on) - article on John McCain by a Phoenix reporter who has covered him for years. The title is Postmodern McCain: The John McCain Some Arizonans Know and Loathe and it really is good - check it out (hat tip K).

Hostaged cameraman\’s brave recordings

8月 18th, 2008

At various moments during Kidnap, ABS-CBN’s documentary on the kidnapping of Ces Drilon and her two-man crew, the camera is rolling surreptitiously in the kidnappers’ lair while armed men hover nearby, one of them looking at the lens as if he suspects what is going on. But none of them ever found out that their faces were being recorded for eventual exposure to the world. Viewers sense that if the kidnappers discovered the secret recording, the cameraman could lose his head.

Despite Ces’s tears in recounting the ordeal and her readiness to face death, and the stylized re-enactment of the events, the tension of possible discovery of the rolling camera was the real drama in the documentary. Ces Drilon was the star hostage but her fellow abductee, veteran cameraman Jimmy Encarnacion, was the one who never stopped being a journalist, despite being threatened with beheading, as he constantly schemed in his head how to bring back video of what could have been an unfolding tragedy. The few minutes of material that survived along with the three hostages are a testament to a heroic act of journalistic presence of mind, which could easily be called foolhardy today if he was somehow detected.

Encarnacion was almost caught, as he tells the anonymous interviewer in Kidnap. His technique for concealing his recordings was to fast-forward the camera, the sound of which was heard by one of the kidnappers. The seasoned videographer played back the tape for the suspicious bad guy and sure enough, the recording was black. (I was just thinking, the next hostaged cameraman may not be able to use that method of concealment anymore.)

The videographer’s enterprise was all the more remarkable because his camera was a bulky Sony DSR 400 instead of the compact digital cams that are easier to manipulate for stealth. Somehow Jimmy had to move that baby in its sack so that the lens could see out of a hole and aim it at his captors. On top of that, he had to convince them to allow him to bring his camera home with the tape intact when they were released. And these weren’t dumb country bumpkins — they knew enough to entrap a smart journalist and extract millions from her family.

I was expecting that some of the kidnappers who appeared in the video would be given some personality, like who was cruel and who said what. But there were no specific references in the bites to anyone in the video, except for a Kumander “Text”, seen in a low angle shot texting away. So while the three hostages were fully humanized, the young, newly minted millionaires-to-be were mostly anonymous faces. There was also little mention of Prof. Dinampo, the supposed peace advocate who set up the aborted appointment with Sahiron and whose motivations have since been put under a cloud.

Encarnacion’s video was the core of a documentary that was skillfully presented without voiceovers, the narrative driven by sound bites from the three hostages, including assistant cameraman Angelo Valderrama who was released before the others after the first ransom payment. But that was after he was forced to kneel and prepare to be beheaded, while Encarnacion was chillingly instructed to record the execution. That never came to pass, as Drilon’s family and perhaps other benefactors eventually produced still-untold millions.

The production directed by indie filmmaker Paolo Villaluna may strike some media colleagues as being exploitative, but after what they went through, Drilon and company can be cut some slack in presenting their story. The lessons shouldn’t be lost on the swash-buckling crowd that loves the Abu Sayyaf beat. Drilon’s pursuit of an interview with the one-armed Radullan Sahiron, the supposed new leader of the bandit group, ended up imbuing him with more mystique without him even making an appearance, while creating an opportunity to pump millions in ransom money into what could only be called Jolo’s underground economy.

If there was any silver lining, the incident prompted some fresh reflections about the safety of journalists, which risks are worth taking, and whether the Abu Sayyaf today can be considered a more significant story than any other notorious bandit group. No journalist of stature has been known to make a similar effort at interviewing, for example, leaders of the Pentagon gang.

In the end, Ces and her team did get their story, even if it did focus on them. Jimmy Encarnacion got his video at great risk to his life. Ces said in her interview that her cameraman did it to identify their captors so they couldn’t do it to others. But one wonders if the video will eventually be useful for that purpose. Money corrupts in Jolo and anywhere else where kidnapping has been a livelihood since time immemorial. A mayor and his son have been charged with masterminding this one. Previous hostages have pointed at military officers, none of whom have been similarly charged despite some outrageously easy escapes, like that colossal betrayal in Lamitan, Basilan in June 2001. Identifying kidnappers doesn’t seem to be the problem, it’s corrupt government.

Jimmy’s video will probably not prevent more kidnappings, since that will now depend on honest law enforcement in a place not known for it. But his covert recordings did bring him glory. Up-and-coming cameramen attempting such a feat in the future may not be so lucky.

An example for the Eraserheads?

8月 18th, 2008

Philmusic.com’s Jim Ayson, who has been closely following the unfolding Eraserheads-Marlboro concert partnership, highlights the role of the tobacco control lobby in the issue here.

The brewing brouhaha comes on the heels of a major smackdown of Big Tobacco by American entertainer Alicia Keys:

Alicia Keys Sets Example for Entertainment Industry By Withdrawing
Tobacco Sponsorship of Indonesia Concert

Statement of Matthew L. Myers ( July 28)
President, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids

WASHINGTON, DC – U.S. singing star Alicia Keys has set a positive
example that should be followed by musicians and entertainers
worldwide by demanding the withdrawal of tobacco industry sponsorship
of her July 31 concert in Jakarta, Indonesia. We applaud Ms. Keys for
taking quick action to disassociate herself from the tobacco industry
and to prevent her name, image and talent from continuing to be used
to market cigarettes to children. It is critical that the tobacco
company involved, Philip Morris International/Sampoerna, and concert
promoters immediately end the sponsorship and all tobacco-related
marketing and branding associated with the concert.

Philippines authorities should
investigate whether marketing for this concert violates a national law
that, as of July 1, 2008, bans tobacco sponsorships and all forms of
tobacco advertising in mass media, including the Internet.

We call on all involved in the music and entertainment industry,
including performers and promoters, to follow Alicia Keys’ example and
adopt policies of rejecting all tobacco sponsorship and other tobacco
promotions. We also call on tobacco companies to immediately cease all
such sponsorships and promotions.

The World Health Organization’s international tobacco control treaty,
the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, requires ratifying
nations to ban all tobacco advertising, promotions and sponsorships.
Nations should act quickly to implement this critical provision of the
treaty. Even before they do, tobacco companies should immediately
cease such sponsorships and promotions, including sporting as well as
entertainment events.

Continue reading “An example for the Eraserheads? “

Talking about TV as craft

8月 18th, 2008

One of the reasons I like hosting the show Sine Totoo is it highlights the roles of people behind the camera, like Wish Ko Lang’s star producer Branden Milla, left, who wrote one of the stories on tonight’s Sine Totoo featuring stories about extreme acts of love by aging men. Aside from producers — who direct and write TV stories — I have also had as guests cameramen, researchers, and of course on-camera reporters and program hosts, like the breastfeeding mom of twin boys in the center, Vicky Morales, whom I asked about the delicate balance between her twin roles as “nation’s fairy godmother” while hosting Wish Ko Lang and the veteran news anchor on Saksi.

Knowing that many students can stay up on Saturday nights to watch, I ask my guests about the craft of TV journalism — how they choose topics and characters, how they prepare to shoot in the rain, any updates on a heart-breaking story, among the directions our conversations take. Then we, along with the viewers, watch the stories we talk about, most of them award-winning pieces produced by the network.

With most colleagues every day, I usually only engage in hurried small talk. So Sine Totoo is often a delicious pleasure that enables me to ask questions they might chortle at if I asked while passing them in a corridor. But on the air, they know a couple of million night owls are also paying attention.

On a future show which has already been taped, I asked the director and cameraman of a Jay Taruc documentary, Lea Llamoso and Jayson Cruz respectively, why it was rendered in black and white for airing. Then it turned out that the cameraman never agreed with the decision and they had a cute little argument on the set about the aesthetics of color versus black and white.

Sometimes, my off-camera guests are filled with fright about appearing on TV for the first time. The experience builds character for sure, but it also probably creates more empathy for the subjects of their own stories who may feel awkward or nervous in front of a camera. So hopefully, the show not only helps students and viewers understand what we do but makes our own personnel appreciate even more the power and impact of our medium.

By the way, Sine Totoo too has excellent people behind the camera, among the key ones program manager Nessa Valdellon, producer Jenny Licen, director Monti Parungao, and video editors Fredie Abril and Tad Payomo.

Nota bene: Scholars & Rogues’ world-famous hot links

8月 18th, 2008

In, “Dear World, Please Confront America,” Naomi Wolf writes: “I had thought that after so much exposure [to revelations about US torture], thousands of Americans would be holding vigils on Capitol Hill, that religious leaders would be asking God’s forgiveness. . . . And yet [there] is no crisis in America’s churches and synagogues. . . . I asked a contact in the interfaith world why. He replied, ‘The mainstream churches don’t care, because they are Republican. And the synagogues don’t care, because the prisoners are Arabs.’” Read the rest of this entry »

The Weekly Carboholic: David Evans’ climate facts hardly factual

8月 18th, 2008
carboholic

I’ve started to read a number of commentators around editorial pages, blogs, and letters to the editor that are quoting an Australian by the name of David Evans. In case you’re unfamiliar, Evans wrote an op-ed in The Australian titled “No smoking hot spot” where he raises a number of issues with the science of global heating. Evans used to work toward mitigating global heating but has since become a skeptic based on perceived weaknesses in the data and modeling of the effects of global heating. Because of his background as a former global heating analyst for the Australian government, he’s become something of a rock star in the denier movement, and his quoting of Lord Keynes (”When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do, sir?”) in his op-ed has become almost a mantra for the global heating deniers and skeptics.

Unfortunately for Evans’ global heating skepticism, but fortunately for the advancement of understanding of the Earth’s climate and anthropogenic global heating, it appears that the facts have changed on him yet again. Read the rest of this entry »

Tunesday: Lyle Lovett live at Floore’s

8月 18th, 2008

The sign reads “Floore Country Store.” Everyone knows it’s “Floore’s” – everyone from around here, that is. Tonight at 9:00 Lyle Lovett takes the stage with a pared-down Large Band. Read the rest of this entry »