well, it turns out that due to current regulations, in the U.S.A. right now, you cannot sell meat to a restaurant unless you have...
1: at least one USDA inspector in your facility
2: said USDA inspector must have their own office and private bathroom.
This eliminates most small farmers and mandates adding middlemen.
It's one of those regulations that specifically favors larger businesses with money to spare, thus kneecapping competition to the big firms. USDA inspectors ought to still drive around to the farms to provide surprise inspections, but they ought to be able to use a laptop and the farmers loo.
Meanwhile....In the Dystopian Hellscape of a Less Liberty Minded Country
A walk through Shibuya under covid-19 guidelines. Japan, hardly a libertarian bastion, has nevertheless instigated largely voluntary measures and not engaged in mandatory closures except for a very few specific instances. Nevertheless, a majority of businesses are shut down voluntarily, and mask usage is is near universal.
For those who suggest that I'm being philosophically inconsistent, note that three weeks ago, while posting skepticism about the wisdom of mass cheek to jowl gatherings without masks, I suggested that while the shutdown was advisable, many of the lockdowns were ridiculously heavy handed and that we should probably start relaxing things in all but the hardest hit areas after about two weeks.
Note: Because we live in the current year, it is necessary (for reasons of Brobdingnagian societal stupidity) to note that, despite complaints in his comments, the thumbnail is a tongue-in-cheek reference to the lockdown and not an endorsement of slavery.
Good grief! Several of these Vector SP1s have one or both of their bolt lugs shorn off, making them simple blowback pistols and not locked breech. As the gun is chambered for 9mm Luger and not 9mm Kurtz or 9mm Makarov, that's bad. It's an easy fix if you haven't already been killed or injured by it.
It is reported that spambots are hacking YouTube accounts via the comments section by asking "Wanna be friends?". Hambly, with permission, pasted the original Evanz111 video on the end of his which goes into depth on the matter.
A 33 minute video from The Epoch Times on China's methods and apparent goals. Epoch Times is a NYC based newspaper affiliated with the Falun Gong, a religious group that is being mercilessly oppressed by the Chinese government. They've tended to be pretty good with regards to their China reporting, frequently ahead of the curve regarding U.S. politics and way out in crazy land on those occasions they discuss U.F.O.s.
The Security Hazards of the Faculty Lounge Kool Aid
We're seeing a disturbing number of stories like this and this, involving college professors getting arrested for passing secrets to China. As disturbing as this is, it's good that this sort of thing is being cracked down upon now.
It certainly is nothing new.
Many years ago (right after Tiananmen) during my first attempt at college, I was the VP of the ODU International Students Association and assisted with exchange student issues.I got a call to pick up an exchange student from China...not the ROC the PRC. Now exchange students from China had been stopped a week earlier so this was...odd. I asked about this and was admonished for doing so. I picked the girl up from the airport and she was a woman who was 40 years old if she was a day. All the way back from the airports to the dorm she kept talking about how much she wanted to get in touch with the Chinese students who were engaged in campus protests against the CCP. I explained this to the head of international services and she yelled at me for being paranoid. Giving no fucks, I then told the head of the Chinese protests and we both agreed that she was whatever the Chinese Stassi is. I then got admonished and called names for spreading rumors about this poor girl who I only then learned was supposed to be 20. I pointed out that this was clearly not the case and got a talking to that I don't entirely remember but involved women's ages and judging them or something.
I didn't actually get removed as VP until I reported the Chinese student who was trying to get me to get him access to the library at NASA Langley. I put him in touch with the outreach office there but he then wanted me to fill out his paperwork as if he was Taiwanese because PRC students were banned from "the good stuff". I told the office about this and they lamented the cold war mentality that discriminated against Chinese students. This eventually escalated and the student obviously wanted to get access to classified stuff. The office would not call the authorities and forbade anyone from doing so so I did.
In contrast to people like the Rosenbergs during the cold war, I don't think a lot of these people are actually traitorous in intent. I think they are naive, and provincial in a peculiarly cosmopolitan way. That is, they live, work, and make friends in a transnational borderless bubble and being in academia are rightly, if excessively, supportive of the free flow of information so they can't conceive that any infringement on that is justified or that foreign academics (who they have far more in common with than their fellow citizens outside the faculty lounge) could be a threat. (Obviously this doesn't extend to views outside their narrow norms.) They view government interference in THEIR affairs much like a libertarian rancher views the introduction of lobo wolves into forests adjoining his herd. They don't see it as legitimate. The difference between having ravenous predators unleashed upon one's herd and trying to protect military secrets is lost upon them.
Of course there aresome who are just on the take, or think China's policies are peachy keen and lament that we are not adopting them to the extent they'd like, but this is probably far outweighed by naive decadence and provincialism.
1
As I said on Twitter: The real reason the Democrats object to Russia trying to control our politics is that they want China to control our politics.
Posted by: Mauser at Tue May 12 22:13:09 2020 (Ix1l6)
2
Academia has been communist for a long time. Not even wool-headed naiveté communist (though there is a lot of that), but "actively conspiring to bring down the country" communist.
Edward Teller's autobiography mentions the severe social cost he incurred by going back to work on the bomb program to develop the H-bomb for the united states. The Federation of American Scientists censured him. He lost most of his friends. He's probably singlehandedly responsible for there still being life on this continent. (Heinlein's autobiographies corroborate this.)
His peers (east European physicists) didn't reject him because they feared the existence of the atomic bomb - for some, that was just an excuse. Some of them were shoveling technical info to the Soviets as fast as they could arrange it. They just didn't want *us* to have it, because we'd use it to hold off the Soviets.
Recall another incident when digging into Hugh Everett: Leon Rosenfeld and a clique of spiteful continental academics treated him horribly on his trip to Europe and sunk his thesis. Everett bugged out of academia. While trolling through correspondence letters, I found that Rosenfeld, an actual communist spy, may have been responsible for trumping up charges to get David Bohm exiled to Brazil as a communist spy, over some disagreement about the interpretation of quantum mechanics. In this case the motive doesn't actually seem to be political! Bohm and Everett were both attempting to make sense out of the nonsensical hash of early quantum physics. They both came up with candidate explanations that are far superior to the Copenhagen interpretation (you can think of quantum computers as an experimental test of Everett's interpretation.) This drove a certain circle in Europe mad, since their philosophical project was an attempt to attack and discredit "realism" and the idea that a world exists independent of our perception.
It's actually somewhat surprising that no one has made a spy novel or thriller about the turmoil surrounding early 20th century physics. There are serious (and mostly unexplored) depths of intrigue and a surprising amount of backstabbing over something as abstract as metaphysics and philosophy.
Posted by: MadRocketSci at Wed May 13 07:20:39 2020 (+G8SK)
3
Not to be paranoid, but I think I understand why some of the administrators were previously so very unhelpful in honoring your credit hours. You probably have your degree either because you outlasted their employment, or their memory of you, or some little notation in your file that you are a -phobe of -ist.
Not that it matters at this late date, but sometimes people really are out to get folks.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at Thu May 14 09:44:35 2020 (sF8WE)
After what started out as a great day (getting off early) I got home, took a shower, laid down, and suddenly woke up in agony 2 hours later.
I moped around the house a few hours stretching and hoping that it could be "worked out" but as the afternoon came and became evening I decided to go to the hospital and get an MRI. I was genuinely afraid that I'd done something very bad to my shoulder.
The Hospital (actually an Emergency Room and minihospital satellite facility to one of the larger area hospitals) was surreal. It was almost empty (or seemed to be) additional rooms are set up and patients are strictly isolated from one another, no one is moved from one room to the other until the hall is clear of patients, meaning that there can only be one patient at a time in any one hall. I was in a temporary, very small, room without a bed. This makes a non life threatening visit to the ER take even longer than it ordinarily would. This certainly qualifies as a second annoyance.
As it happens, I have a torn rotator cuff. I think "torn" is probably too dramatic as I'm slated to return to work Saturday. It hurts like a houndette at certain angles and is merely a dull pain at others. This was, of course, the first annoyance of the day, though due to my poor reporting skills is only listed second. I apologize for any confusion this may have caused you, gentle reader. I was prescribed 4 days off and muscle relaxants which leads to the third of the days annoyances.
You see, the drugstore is now under plague hours, which ended two hours before I got there to pick up my prescription. This leaves me with unrelaxed muscles and a generally sour demeanor as I type this.
A few minutes ago I drove to work to physically turn in my paperwork from the hospital and see if there was any other paperwork I needed to fill out. There likely will be but as the supervisor in charge of that will not be in until much later, so I'll have to endure the annoyance of having that hang over my head until I can get back.
If the arm is not ready for heavy lifting by Saturday, then I have to see an orthopedist and contemplate surgery, but that is, as of now, a theoretical annoyance that I hope to avoid all together.
Finally, here is a raccoon eating someone's peanut butter, which must be quite annoying.
1
I'm pretty sure the club had more members than just 3.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Mon May 11 00:15:48 2020 (LZ7Bg)
2
Those are the core of the show, though, with the most screen time. The rich girl (and her rather-unusual butler) and the tiny girl are secondary characters.
-j
Posted by: J Greely at Mon May 11 14:01:41 2020 (ZlYZd)
3
Asking for a friend: What show is that?
And don't say "Top Gear" please.
Posted by: Anonymous Coward at Mon May 11 17:16:56 2020 (Api9H)
4
I hate to break it to you, but the show is Top Gear.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Mon May 11 18:21:04 2020 (5iiQK)
6
I don't know. I, I mean he, hasn't watched much anime in the last few years -- the last one I I mean he remembers is moretsu pirates.
Posted by: Anonymous Coward at Mon May 11 20:21:32 2020 (Api9H)
7
I couldn't make it through the series. Bakuon!!, I mean. I made it through a LOT of Top Gear, although it's been a while.
Something just didn't click for me. The balance between reality and suspension of disbelief felt a little off.
Posted by: Ben at Tue May 12 12:00:48 2020 (osxtX)
8
I rather liked the first girl, even with (or maybe because of) the curly hair. Although sometimes I wondered if there was some kind of Japanese Ethnic angle hinted at there that the international audience totally missed.
Posted by: Mauser at Tue May 12 22:17:06 2020 (Ix1l6)
9
Curly Japanese hair that is so very curly would be associated with African, European, or Ainu descent, generally.
Of course, "excessive use of curlers or perm chemicals" is also a possibility.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at Thu May 14 09:51:36 2020 (sF8WE)
Dispatches From the Shipping Industry
I'm frequently working more overtime than straight time. Our building has been consistently breaking its all time record for volume. On a personal note, I'm handling over 10,000 parcels a day. This is problematic due to the fact that both my plantar facitis and kidney stones have been acting up in a big way, though I have not called out since the 10th of April.
With higher than Christmas volume and what was initially March level staffing, work has been rather hectic. Eventually the company became convinced that this was a long term issue and began hiring new people about a week ago. 12 people have been hired for our building over the last two weeks of which four lasted one full day and three are still with us. This has not caught us up from the attrition of those who quit due to the workload.
We have the worst economy since the great depression and jobs starting at ~$16.00 with annual pay increases, full medical coverage, actual sick leave (unlike some places) and opportunities for advancement can't get filled because people come in and are horrified by physical labor...or they cant past the drug test or background check.
What is wrong with these kids today?
What is that? It's a CLOUD! DAMN YOU STUPID CLOUD GET OUT OF MY SKY WITH YOU'RE SMUG WHISPY CUMULUS FACE!!
Anyway, I got the grass cut. I have to be to work in 6 hours so I should probably eat or go to bed or something.
1
Years ago, when I was even poorer than I am now, I did apply to Big Brown for a position, and got an interview. However, the HR person doing the interview was so dismissive, if not borderline insulting, that I refuse to ever choose Big Brown for anything that I have a say in to this day.
Also, I had former co-worker who had worked for Big Brown before and then went back part-time a while later, to earn a little extra cash. One of the politest, well mannered, even tempered person I personally know - who quit Big Brown after two weeks into his second go-around with them because his supervisor was a massive jerk.
God knows I seen too many terrible new hires come and go at work, and a lot of people are not going to cut it in the working world. But I do not think all of them are...
Posted by: cxt217 at Mon May 11 21:24:20 2020 (4i7w0)
2
My thanks to you and your colleagues. I wave at my neighborhood's UPS driver whenever I see him.
Posted by: Matthew Cowles at Mon May 11 21:50:48 2020 (irynM)
About Those "Murder Hornets"
You, gentle reader, have heard about the "Murder Hornets". They are very large hornets that carry a huge amount of venom and will often swarm like killer bees or yellow-jackets if provoked. Like other examples of new and exciting biodiversity we've been blessed with this year, these plucky insects hail mainly from the Middle Kingdom. Note that in addition to being dangerous to people, they feed upon, amongst other things, European Honey Bees.
Now one of the Brickmuppet's Crack Team of Science-Babes takes a moment from her hornet hunting to re-assure us that while these bugs are dangerous they're not the end of the world, as well as to bring us this video pointing out that North America is not without some indigenous defense.
Happy Cinco De Mayo!
No it's not the U.S.M.'s independence day, but it's not entirely made up either. The holiday, at least in theory, celebrates the Battle of Puebla, where a vastly outnumbered Mexican force routed an Imperial French Army in 1862 during the French attempt to install a friendly Austrian Archduke as monarch in the United States of Mexico.
This was not the pivotal battle during the war, but it was a great morale booster for the Mexicans and gives American college students ample excuses to get drunk and pass out.
This year, Cinco De Mayo it gives us fine opportunity to relax and not be reminded in any way of the current unpleasantness.
The best way to celebrate a Mexican Drinking Holiday is, of course with Mexican beer, the best known of which is probably Coro....
I Ought Not To Have to Say This
One thing I've noticed over the last few years is a rise in casual anti-semitism (outside of /pol/). Some of this is simply black humor, some of this is mental children needing to always push the edge of acceptable discourse to prove to themselves that they are free, but a fair bit of it seems to be based in an actual belief that Jews are a problem to be solved.
I for one, am very grateful for Dr. Salk and the current lack of a polio season, for Oppenheimer for helping us win the second world war and prevent the cold war for going hot. Stanislaw Ulam for doing all that work on nuclear rockets that will, hopefully one day open up the vastness of space for settlement and the large number of Ashkenazi in the U.S. for raising our collective IQ.
I think part of this rebound in antisemitism is a generational thing. I'm 50. I lived for a very few years in a largely Jewish neighborhood in The South and there were a few women there with thick accents and numbers tattooed on their arms. The holocaust happened. It was real and when I was growing up, it was well within living memory. The idea that people would seriously deny it always seemed beyond belief. To young people today though, the idea that a major bit of history might be a lie is not a particularly novel concept when their education is steeped in Postmodernism and Social Constructionism.
Leftists have always had a sort of passive aggressive love/hate relationship with Jews going back to Marx and his Essay on The Jewish Question. Apologists will claim it is actually a defense of Jews...somehow...but if so it is a very inept one that was quoted in several speeches by an odious Austrian during his beer-hall days. Recently, in fairly rapid succession, I saw several comments on various micro-blogging sites to the effect that 'Bolshivism would work fine if no Jews were present'. That at least one who posted comments along those lines was a Bernie Bro makes my head hurt. The decent of the labor party in the U.K. into the most foeted depths of antisemitism is appalling but not really surprising if one has been observing the left since the early to mid 90's. The U.S. far left is not far behind and is so sure of its own righteousness that it cannot see this (among its many other pathologies) in the glare of their own smugness . More disturbing to me is the recent resurgence on the right I've witnessed. In the South, we're at least aware of our past failings, and painfully conscious of how easily hatred can be embraced by ordinary people and how even the best can go down a dark path or simply respond to past injustice by giving in to hate and rage....becoming the very monster one rails against. Ours is a complex and sad tale that nevertheless has, for those who will listen, great lessons in both courage, redemption and dignity. Today, of course, no one is listening. However, it is perhaps telling that what was once the center of the darkest chapters of antisemitism is one the parts of the country most supportive of both Israel and Jews in general. That is changing as others move in and the children are educated differently than we were. The memory of the holocaust is fading and the healthy and well-justified mistrust of government in general and institutional norms is, unfortunately, resulting in pretty much all things being opened to question, and as we've seen with the generally athiest alt-right, when unmoored from ones foundations, one can very quickly go to dark places. In contrast to the lefts increasingly strident embrace of this odious worldview, the number of anti-semites on the right is still small and largely confined to the margins (Trump's embrace of his Jewish family members and support for Israel is exceedingly popular with the vast majority of his coalition from the populist, to the more libertarian leaning conservatives to the Evangelicals) but it is there.
This trend on the right is helped by the prominence of powerful Jews amongst the pantheon of of the promoted personalities amongst our tormentors. Names like Mike Bloomberg, Harvey Weinstein, George Soros, Sergei Brin, and other examples of malice and malevolence are all over the news, everybody knows their names, they are talked about all the time and most are some pretty execrable people, some of whom are direct threats to our liberty....
...and this is why I think that the anti-semites in general are not merely worrisome, odious and wrong...they are kinda' retarded.
You know what the Jews would do if they were running the world?
They'd hide it.
Instead, if there is some cabal type group acting like Mafia Dons on a global scale, then the Jews are the distraction.
The WASPy families and their ChiCom Sugar Daddies, the lesser known of the tech-weasels of Palo Alto and whoever might or might not be running whatever transnationalist progressive plot one might imagine are not the ones that the invective is directed at. All the rage is directed at a handful of their Jewish associates who are getting an inordinate amount of press.
So if you're actually into conspiracies, and you believe in a 4-D chess theory of world events, then the Jews are probably a distraction to direct our ire away from the real problem.
If one is unpersuaded by the notion that the world is the plaything of a shadowy group of sinister members of our ruling classes exhibiting heretofore unsuspected degrees of competence, then, like with every other group there are a few bad apples amongst the sons and daughters of Abraham and crap floats to the to the top with them like everybody else.
I'm still glad we don't have a Polio season.
And while I emphatically oppose censoring the voices of these antisemitic numbnuts, I'm quite annoyed that I have to disavow, decry and denounce their numbnuttery.
1
I think I'd cry a little brook if they didn't vote 71-24 for Hillary.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Tue May 5 08:41:17 2020 (LZ7Bg)
2
Culture is a powerful thing. Jews tend to be urban an urbanites tend to vote for the D. 24% is pretty good for an ethnic group categorized as "diverse" nowadays. Suffice it to say that there's a LOT of history there and political affiliations tend to be hereditary. Furthermore, given the history and rhetoric of the various pogroms they faced in Eurasia over the last 150 years, hearing theories about how they are a secret disloyal cabal ruining everything is going to naturally have them flee to the other side. That the other side is way worse in this regard is not evident except to those of us who get some of our news from non-left-wing sources...but that's an issue with voters in general.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Tue May 5 09:56:02 2020 (5iiQK)
3
I used to carpool with a guy who was convinced that a secret cabal has been running the planet since before the Phoenicians. At the same time, he'd complain that his grown son never did what daddy told him to do. I wonder if he ever made the connection?
Posted by: Frank at Tue May 5 20:25:55 2020 (rglbH)
4
Son was obviously recruited by the secret cabal, duh.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Tue May 5 22:18:18 2020 (LZ7Bg)
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et INANIS STREPITUS
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Wildcat Strike
Today is Victims of Communism Day, the day we remember the millions of millions of people who died at the hands of Goddless commies, their gulags and their collectivization schemes around the world.
It was chosen because it's also MayDay, the day communists agitate the dull witted to put them in charge, and today the mountebanks were having another go at it. Yes today was a strike of essential workers to lobby for better working conditions....the sort of working conditions one might have if one did not have half of ones co-workers dumping the load upon one.
This will not go well for those who left us to die under a tsunami of boxes.
One: we did not die, and this has left us in an unforgiving mood.
Two: UPS actually HAS a union. One which has a binding contract and one that takes a dim view of wildcat strikes.
I don't know any numbers, or how much participation in this slacker meme there was nationally, but it was an absolute nightmare of endless cardboard that made Christmas look almost pleasant.
Nevertheless we got the food and supplies people have ordered and the medical supplies going to the hospitals and those damned Nordic Tracs and Gaming Chairs too...and we got them all out, albeit a bit later than normal, most everything scheduled to be delivered today will be.
If, in the course of your very limited quarantine travels today, you spy a UPS driver, please thank them for coming to work. They are having a really bad day but THEY are doing their job. Me? I don't have to be back to work for....15 more hours. I should try to pass this stone or bathe or eat or something.
Whatever one thinks of Mr Hambly or B.I.T.C., the situation they're reporting on seems to be very real, disturbing and I think we can agree, unacceptable.
It appears that SakimiChan, who (in addition to being a talented and popular artist) gives monthly tutorials on how to draw, has run afoul of the Guild Of Professionally Offended Karens.
Specifically, GOPOK is appalled that an old tutorial in artistry is focussed on rendering the wrong sort of body type.
Sakimi-chan was soon bombarded with criticism and harassment by like-minded art authoritarians, or ‘arthoritarians,’ with the harassment ranging from claims that she was a terrible artist because she did not ‘understand anatomy,’ to accusations of fatphobia based on a tutorial on drawing plus-sized bodies that did not conform to the critics’ very specific standards of representation, to outright calls for the continued bullying and harassment of Sakimi-chan:
Well that' sucks.
If you agree that these puritanical scolds ought to get bent, then follow Sakimichan on Pixiv and on Twitter: Support her quest to add beauty to the world on Patreon and buy her stuff on Gumroad and/or Art Station.
Here's what for her is a low res-piece of 'GravityGal' from her Pixiv...
Yes ladies, she draws dudes too...
...and if you're into it, yaoi, yuri...and interpretational furry.
Entertainment News That is Either Very Good or Very Terrible
What could this mean? It appears to be about One Punch Man, but the katakana looks almost like it says "Hollywood" right before the word jisha movie. What's a jisha movie? and why are there so many loanwords mucking up a tweet about One Punch Man?
"Original: ONE Animation: Yupan Murata's manga" One Punch Man "will be made into a live-action movie in Hollywood. Distributor Sony Pictures has high expectations for this film adaptation, assigning Scott Rosenberg and Jeff Pinkner, the popular screenwriters of "Venom" and "Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle" to the script development.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Mon Apr 27 17:16:43 2020 (LZ7Bg)
2
Lemme guess: Netflix is calling it "Python King"
Posted by: fillyjonk at Mon Apr 27 20:25:20 2020 (+MBAo)
3Adaptational decay, With the images it is in our control where we can easily collect different type of images which mostly come in our mind. If you think this easy essays process is valid to see the detail first and then start to do something that time hope you understand what we are talking.
Posted by: Steve Perez at Fri Jul 2 06:04:36 2021 (pzSob)
I Think I've Found The Problem
Perusing Pixy's site, it dawned on me that one of the main issues with 2020 is that so much of what's happening could be a blurb for a Sy-Fy Channel movie.
1
Like last year when they opened an Egyptian tomb sealed for four thousand years and dug ancient worms out of the Siberian permafrost on the same day. The apples are probably somewhat less of a threat unless the Chinese find a way to make apple soup.
Hobby Space News of the commercial space industry A Babe In The Universe Rather Eclectic Cosmology Encyclopedia Astronautica Superb spacecraft resource The Unwanted Blog Scott Lowther blogs about forgotten aerospace projects and sells amazingly informative articles on the same. Also, there are cats. Transterrestrial Musings Commentary on Infinity...and beyond! Colony WorldsSpace colonization news! The Alternate Energy Blog It's a blog about alternate energy (DUH!) Next Big Future Brian Wang: Tracking our progress to the FUTURE. Nuclear Green Charles Barton, who seems to be either a cool curmudgeon, or a rational hippy, talks about energy policy and the terrible environmental consequences of not going nuclear Energy From Thorium Focuses on the merits of thorium cycle nuclear reactors WizBang Current events commentary...with a wiz and a bang The Gates of Vienna Tenaciously studying a very old war The Anchoress insightful blogging, presumably from the catacombs Murdoc Online"Howling Mad Murdoc" has a millblog...golly! EaglespeakMaritime security matters Commander Salamander Fullbore blackshoe blogging! Belmont Club Richard Fernandez blogs on current events BaldilocksUnderstated and interesting blog on current events The Dissident Frogman French bi-lingual current events blog The "Moderate" VoiceI don't think that word means what they think it does....but this lefty blog is a worthy read nonetheless. Meryl Yourish News, Jews and Meryls' Views Classical Values Eric Scheie blogs about the culture war and its incompatibility with our republic. Jerry Pournell: Chaos ManorOne of Science fictions greats blogs on futurism, current events, technology and wisdom A Distant Soil The website of Colleen Dorans' superb fantasy comic, includes a blog focused on the comic industry, creator issues and human rights. John C. Wright The Sci-Fi/ Fantasy writer muses on a wide range of topics. Now Read This! The founder of the UK Comics Creators Guild blogs on comics past and present. The Rambling Rebuilder Charity, relief work, roleplaying games Rats NestThe Art and rantings of Vince Riley Gorilla Daze Allan Harvey, UK based cartoonist and comics historian has a comicophillic blog! Pulpjunkie Tim Driscoll reviews old movies, silents and talkies, classics and clunkers. Suburban Banshee Just like a suburban Leprechaun....but taller, more dangerous and a certified genius. Satharn's Musings Through TimeThe Crazy Catlady of The Barony of Tir Ysgithr アニ・ノート(Ani-Nouto) Thoughtful, curmudgeonly, otakuism that pulls no punches and suffers no fools. Chizumatic Stephen Den Beste analyzes anime...with a microscope, a slide rule and a tricorder. Wonderduck Anime, Formula One Racing, Sad Girls in Snow...Duck Triumphalism Beta Waffle What will likely be the most thoroughly tested waffle evah! Zoopraxiscope Too In this thrilling sequel to Zoopraxiscope, Don, Middle American Man of Mystery, keeps tabs on anime, orchids, and absurdities. Mahou Meido MeganekkoUbu blogs on Anime, computer games and other non-vital interests Twentysided More geekery than you can shake a stick at Shoplifting in the Marketplace of Ideas Sounds like Plaigarism...but isn't Ambient IronyAll Meenuvians Praise the lathe of the maker! Hail Pixy!!